Gary--
That is fan
tastic...As Peter says, projects have begun with less. What a souvenir, in any case.
Totally unrelated to this thread, I'd been emailing offboard about the aircraft lost in the Hangar 3 fire; got several photos scanned, will, when time allows, get some of them onto Photobucket and thence onto WIX. NX9BL/MK297 spent her final two and a half years of existence at CWH, so I have a few shots of her in her last days (backward-turning Seafire XV prop and all). No shots post-fire, though, as very little was left and what happened to the meagre remains is anyone's guess...It does occur to me that, besides the main gear legs and windscreen frame, the engine bearers ought also to have survived the fire (unless they went with the Merlin to JRS?), but all I've ever heard cited are the gear legs and the windscreen frame.
More of the Hurricane survived, since much of the core structure of a Hurricane is steel tube. I do have pix of that. What a wrenching sight. And yes, the gear legs on the GRP Hurricane mockup in the museum now are supposed to be the original set from C-GCWH/5377, cosmetically refurbished...of course the GRP thingies do not normally come with gear, being intended for mounting in flying pose on pylons. The rest of the Hurricane remains lingered around the CWH hangars, and then next to the old airport firehall, for about a year, then disappeared.
The other aircraft lost in the fire were the TBM (partly fueled at the time, it exploded during the fire, producing the huge fireball seen in the best-known newspaper pic of the disaster), the near-completed Auster 6 (some of the frame of that, too, being steel, survived), the fuselage of the Stinson 105 (the wings were stored elsewhere and still exist), and CWH past-president Dennis Bradley's Rockwell 680V Turbine Commander.
Sorry, that's a tad O/T, but it helps round off the story...
So, Gary, when can we expect the new MK297 to go onto the US register??
S.