Bill Walker wrote:
Aren't there a number of Dakotas, with full C of As, with US registration based in the UK? This may just be a tax dodge today.
Hi Bill,
Good point, I'd overlooked the Daks. I think Mark V put his finger on it that they aren't under the restricted requirements which most combat-only types face, Dakotas being a full-certificate type, I
assume. That said, most of the UK based Daks are on the UK register, only a couple which are technically transient arent. Other types I can think which fit this are PBY / Catalinas and Grumman Widgeons and Gooses (Geese?!) which have been UK based while on the USCR for a
period.
Bill Walker wrote:
I know a few ex Brit military aircraft made it on to the UK register immediately after the war, for commercial or display purposes. As another poster stated, the whole world seemed to be going with US surplus aircraft then, at least for serious commercial operations. The British freighters, etc didn't seem to last long. I wonder if this was due to shear numbers of US aircraft available, or spares availability, or reliability (sleeve valve engines versus P&W and Wright, for example) or a bit of all 3?
That was me, and I'd assume a bit of all three. When given a choice, e.g in Canada and Aus, US engines seem to have been preferred over UK ones in transport types - the famous exception being the Northstar.
Gary - Good idea to contact the IWM. Interesting reply. The 'canvas covered' types were the Wellington (very obsolete in 1945) and um, well, of the major types (Lancaster, Halifax and the obsolete Stirling) the rest were stressed skin metal construction. The Mosquito was wood with a fabric covering (madapolam) but that served very well in the RAF until the 1950s.
I also don't agree with '...these soon became obsolete in the face of jet aircraft...' Jets were not the issue. The conversions of the Lancastrian, freight Stirling and Halton from Halifax were not as efficient at the job as the US dedicated types or the floods of C-47 / Dakotas. (Parts and numbers as well as arguably reliability would have been factors.) Even the dedicated airliners remained piston powered for some time, or we'd have not seen the heyday of the DC-4, 6 and Connie before the jets really arrived.
While 'canvas' (used for sails, IMHO, fabric - Irish linen and relatives being the material, I thought?) wasn't an issue as stated, IMHO, the structure of aircraft such as the Mosquito didn't take being laid up well, and again sheer numbers and space were factors. There just weren't so many British bombers at the war's end; those left were used up or quickly scrapped, while the US had too many and no hurry to scrap them at the same rate.
That said, the general trend and all Christopher's other points I'd agree with. The US desert storage is, for air forces around the world, as I said earlier, an
exception, rather than a rule relating to 'maintaining' aircraft and using 'valuable space'
It's been an interesting thread; one other factor is that once you start looking at the statistical survival rates (see the bomber count thread) they are all coming in at around or under 1% survivors from production - again, the greater US production is reflected in greater surviving numbers even at this statistically error-bracket level.
Thanks to Mark Pilkington for his efforts here.
Except for certain N American products, and a Douglas type, all warbirds from W.W.II are survivors in tiny numbers. We are lucky there are any.
Cheers,