Jungle Bob,
further to in-accuracies on the identities of various Beaufighters, and my own blunder into that same arena, it would be great to see the HARS website pages regarding the Beaufighter project completed with pics etc and details of the airframe history, and perhaps document the end location of many of the airframes parts collected by HARS over the years.
Unfortunately the blank HARS "Beaufighter" webpage along with the apparantly incorrect details provided HARS website page "About the Society" adds further to the "identity" confusion at this time.
http://www.hars.org.au/about/index.html
Quote:
It was in this capacity that our members virtually traversed the Australian continent from Tasmania to Kalumburu in North Western Australia and from cape Llewellin to Cape York in search of aviation artefacts. These expeditions resulted in providing considerable assistance to many restorations including many outside of the Society itself. Of significant importance was the recovery in the early eighties of two Beaufighter airframes from North Western Australia. One, a Mk1 Beaufighter Aircraft was exchanged after it had been restored by the Society for the Lockheed Super Constellation. This aircraft now resides in the United States Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio. The other airframe is central to the Mk21 Beaufighter currently under restoration by the Society.
Seemly referring to the Kalumburu recoveries being of a mark 1 (A19-43?) and a Mk 21 (A8-371?) rather than the two mk XI airframes A19-144? and A19-148? I always understood these airframes were largely centre-section and fuselage sections, without cockpits?
It would be great if the Beaufighter fact sheet when completed could tell of the recovery of A19-144 and A19-148 from Kalumburu and comment on their end destinations as well as describing the situation regarding A8-324, A8-374 and A19-43, and the collection of NOS items such as Centre-Sections and wings, HARS have played such a major role in the return of at least 5 additional Beaufighter survivors from the original 5 recorded as existing in collections through the 1970's etc. and should be proud of their contributions in this area.
In the absence of an authoritive reference there continues to be various suggestions of the fuselage of A8-374 being with the USAFM in addition to holding A19-43, (adding to confusion over the provenance of the fuselage sections used in the USAFM restoration) and the fuselage of A8-324 along with A19-144 being used in the restoration at the Fighter Collection, leaving some confusion as to which airframe is the basis of the HARS restoration. (which I assume is based on mk 21 A8-374??)
my own guesstimate or line of best fit, based on various replies and corrections in such forums would be:
A19-144 centre-section and fuselage with contributions from A8-324 fuselage is the basis the Fighter Collection? with the airframe being presented as A19-144?
A19-148 centre-section and fuselage is the basis of the RAAFM project?
A19-43 is largely itself? as recovered from Nhill, on display at USAFM.
A8-374? fuselage is the basis of the HARS mark 21 project with NOS centre-section and other sources? (ie little or no A19-144 involvement)
The Flightpath article also refers to the rear fuselage of A19-148? being used in the restoration of the Skyport mk1F X7688.
I know you always try resolve these confusions openly in forums such as these, but it might be easier to put it all on the HARS website, along with photos etc
regards
Mark Pilkington