At Tocumwal, Wirraway frames were cut up and used as tree guards, you used to be able to see them on one of the main roads out of town. Also in town there is a house that has all manner of bits of canopy perspex set into the front porch floor like a mosaic. Nearby there was a Merlin engine with prop that was set on a stand and used to blow air across a fruit orchard to prevent mould setting in.
Elsewhere a house in inner Melbourne has Boomerang bay doors being used as a shed wall and the roof struts are Beaufighter and Mosquito undercarriage leg parts. There was another frame type that was used as a chook shed nearby but believed lost in a fire.
In NSW a dairy farmer was using Beaufighter wing panels as a wall in his dairy. They have now been saved (I pick them up next week !) A Beaufort cockpit section was being used in Northern NSW as a *ahem* hydroponic facility until rescued.
And of course in Balwyn, in Melbourne's inner East there was the fuse of a Beaufighter sitting in a backyard that was a young girls playground thing. That went to the US eventually.
Our Beaufighter at the Museum was used along with a Vampire, Canberra and Boomerang as playground equipment at the Lord Mayors Camp in Portsea.
Numerous B24 and similar wheels are still being used to this day on various farm equipment all over the place.
That's all I can think of right now

Cheers