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#1
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For everybody who's interested in the mysterious hurricane or the history of hurricanes in general, here is some more stuff to think about:
I've compared the photo with some paint schemes of Belgian Hurricanes from the period 1939-1940. The Belgian roundel was a lot smaller and was also situated a little more to the bottom of the fuselage in comparison with British Hurricanes. Still, the piece of canvas that was cut out seems a little bit small to carry a Belgian roundel. On the other hand, the roundel was the only thing that was on the Belgian fuselages, so that could explain the absence of squadron codes. Belgian Hurricanes only got a number painted on their rudder (that area isn't on the photo). All the Belgian Hurricanes I've seen did not have a flag painted on the tail, for as far as I see, this hurricane neither... At first I also considered that this was an airplane that didn't got his national markings painted on yet when it was destroyed. But that seems not logical because there must have been something that those souvenir hunters found interesting enough to cut out... There are also a lot of facts that make the possibility that this was Hurricane with Belgian Markings doubtfull. The main one is that the version the Belgian military bought (some 20 planes) were all from the early type with the two bladed propellor. It's clear that this can't be one of the original Belgian planes. An interesting detail is that Belgium possesed at the beginning of the war some Hurricanes that they had captured from the British! In the months that preceded the German offensive Belgium tried very hard to maintain their neutrality. It happened that British Hurricanes ran out of fuel and landed on Belgian soil. Those British pilots where then captured and their planes joined Belgian regiments. The situation of neutrality caused also some funny events. On day during the phoney war a British Hurricane ran out of fuel and landed on a long straight road, just a few hundred meters from the French border. Civilians informed the pilot that he was on Belgian soil and pushed the plane a few hundred meters down the road so it was back in France again. The plane was refueled and the pilot could rejoin his squadron. As for me, the black and white undersurface of the Hurricane from the picture and his three-bladed prop, proofs that it was (at least originaly) a British plane. The Belgian undersurfaces were only one color. It takes a lot of remarks to fit this picture into the story of the captured hurricanes... Still it is not impossible that a British hurricane with three propblades landed in Belgium and was transeferd to a Belgian airfield. It's possible that they didn't repaint the whole plane but just changed the national markings. In each case, the chance that this plane saw combat if it was Belgian in may 40 is very small, because almost all the Belgian hurricanes were destroyed on the ground during the first hours of the war. That's a big load of history that that photo would carry with it if it was indeed one of those captured hurricanes. I fear, that once again the truth maybe isn't that impressive and it's just a scrapped hurri without national markings on an field somewhere on the countryside |
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#2
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Quote:
Good post. We may never know the exact facts. Or maybe we will?? Best Regards MB_Avro. |
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#3
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Was digging around a bit; for the props I searched around for Spitfires as well, and found this comment:
Quote:
and Quote:
http://forum.keypublishing.co.uk/showthread.php?t=87258 So it seems that there were 3 blade wooden props around, would explain the broken prop blades (rather than bent). Images of a Ju88 with wooden broken props I have seen looked same, clean straight cuts when broken. The black/white underpaint seems to indicate France: http://www.wonwinglo.scale-models.net/id47.htm Scroll down to the Hurricane just past the He111 pattern. If you do a google search you find more images with black/bright under pants: http://www.nvva.nl/renekrul/catalogs...ne.l.--kt-.jpg Some earlies had precious little markings: http://homepages.tesco.net/~mrogers/...story-pg3.html http://www.wwiivehicles.com/unitedki...ne-mk-i-01.jpg However hard to say what happened to the markings. Quote:
4 Wing guns, outer bays are for lights. Gun camera seem to have been mounted outside, near the guns themselves, while closer inside at wing roots there was oil tank indeed: http://www.flightglobal.com/airspace...ne-cutaway.jpg This might be a gun cam mount, albeit in other wing: http://mm04.nasaimages.org/MediaMana...sa&profileid=9 Bad quality, but shows something round on left wing which does not exist on right wing. Maybe really connected with oil tank as seems only one oil tank in the plane, not in both wings. Plenty of rough field in front of airplane, guess it came down wheels up and then turned around just before it got to a stop. Two of these fellow have seemingly same strip at uniform collar, and they sure look German to me: http://crbolch.com/hurricanedown2.jpg As do the 3 fellows at bottom of engine in this pic: http://crbolch.com/do17&crew.jpg ++++ |
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#4
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Interesting info, thanks.
This is a photo of a Hurricane in France. In front of the Hurricane can be seen the wing roundel of a damaged French aircraft. Of interest is that the Hurricane has an anti-glare metal plate positioned between the exhaust and the cockpit for night flying. It's generally thought that this adaption was only fitted during the later Battle of Britain period. ![]() Best Regards, MB_Avro |
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#5
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Hi MB,
The Hurricane in the pics part way down this page had recently returned from the Battle of France when it was photographed. It sports the anti glare panels. http://simhq.com/forum/ubbthreads.ph...2682133/1.html RedToo. |
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