WIXerGreg wrote:
By coincidence I ordered an SBD kit earlier in the week and opened it tonight to find it was a Lexington bird that flew on May 8. Surely the 12 on the wing of this plane makes it the same plane as my kit?
As a modeler too, I can dig it!!
In fact I too was eye-balling a couple of 1/72 F4F-4s in my stash and contemplating what it would take to visually back-date them to -3s aboard Lady Lex.

I think Adm. Gayler's Wildcat is proof that you can't always be 100% accurate in your markings based on photos and documents . It would seem to me that this is evidence that aircraft #s could change throughout the deployment without being well documented. Aircraft would get shuffled around when one lost and then replaced with another from the Hangar bay rafters or from ashore.
F-5 is interesting as it appears to have been another number (don't think they were called Modex back then) assignment previously, which begs the question: If Gayler's F-5 used to be some other No. ......then what became of previous aircraft to wear F-5? (Its almost like we need a ROGUE ONE prequel to the Battle of Midway movie to explain the origins of RED(F)-5
Question: Does anyone know, does Adm. Gayler flight log books still exist and can they be referenced?
Shay
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Semper Fortis