CAPFlyer wrote:
RNHF wrote:
Neee Nawwww Neee Nawww......screeeeeech!!!! Roundel Police!
Can someone
PLEASE explain why the roundel has been applied with those proportions??

Because there's other Swordfish out there with similar ones?
http://www.lacornicheoranaise.com/p4c_f ... rdfish.jpghttp://www.beehivehockey.com/images/his ... rdfish.jpghttp://www.cbrnp.com/profiles/quarter2/swordfish.htmThere appears to be several variations of "official" roundel applied to the Swordfish in the historic photos I found, but I don't find any on the net of this particular aircraft, so who knows, maybe somewhere in the documentation that came with the Swordfish there's a picture of the paint that is being replicated showing that to be the correct application.
The roundels you show in the first two pics are the pre-war A-type roundels. The one on the CAF aircraft has a yellow outer section which was applied to A1-type roundels, but with different proportions.
[Incidentally I note the last link quote Scale Aircraft Modelling's illustrator as being Mike Weeks - should, of course, be the late, very great Mike Keep - ironically he used to live about 100yds from where I'm typing this!]
On page 74 of Ray Sturtivant's
The Swordfish Story under "Mediterranean 1941 - 1942" there is a photo of Swordfish I '5C' of 824 NAS after landing on W5844 ('4G') of 813 NAS on Eagle, 9 Feb 42. It would seem that the CAF aircraft has been done in the same scheme, but the photo clearly shows A1-type fuselage roundels.
Unfortunately roundels - be it the proportions, the type or the hues - are the markings most often applied incorrectly, which is a big shame.
EDIT: Renowned markings expert Ian Huntley wrote in Scale Aircraft Modelling July 1991:
"Common to all British military aircraft, the FAA added a yellow outer ring to the fuselage roundel on 1 July 1940. RAF fighters had used the marking from a week or so earlier and had found it beneficial. Generally, it was applied around the existing [A-type] marking, often to a wider band thickness than was required, making for a well oversized final design [A1-type]".