k5083 wrote:
I guess my first question would be, how sure are we that those IDs are really official civil registrations?
I toyed with the idea that they could be some other identification marking, but nothing else seemed to fit. For example, I briefly considered that they could be British military serial numbers. However, as far as I can tell, the British never had serials that began with three letters either. Furthermore, the Martlets used serial numbers that began with AL, AX, BJ, and BT.
[1]It's interesting that the
one in French markings has a hyphen in the registration: "NX-G1". However, the Spirit of St. Louis's registration, N-X-211, has no less than two. So it's not out of the question.
k5083 wrote:
My understanding of N-numbers is that regardless of the prefix letters, the following sequence beginning with the number has to be unique. That means that if there were really an NXG6, there couldn't be an NX6, NC6, NR6, etc. At least that was true with the version of the system that carried through after the 1940s. I'd want to check CAA-FAA records to see if these registrations really existed or were just corporate/military designations that look sort of like civil registrations.
Other than asking for standard copies of aircraft paperwork of CD, I haven't done much research with the FAA and I don't know how accessible records like that would be.
k5083 wrote:
I know there is a rule against painting a letter/number sequence on your plane that looks like it could be a civil registration, which is why the CAF's Spitfire used to sport only the letters H749 of its serial NH749. But more recently I notice it displays the whole serial, so apparently you can get a waiver. It wouldn't have been hard for the military and aircraft corporations to get such waivers if they wanted to further that facade of neutrality you mentioned.
It's actually something that I've considered in regards to the restoration of aircraft where the registration, since it was painted so large on the wing, could be considered part of the paint scheme of the aircraft. For example, a regular Piper Cub being restored to resemble a Flitfire, but the registration of the aircraft being replicated, for whatever reason, is not available. The rule you mentioned can be found in
14 CFR 45.22, which allows exemptions from the normal marking rules. (I presume partially based on justification similar to that behind the Living History Flight Experience.) The same section states that if normal marking is impossible under any of the existing regulation, requests for exemption may be applied for on a case-by-case basis. I guess the next question would be whether the same rule existed under the CAA in 1940.
As an aside, if any marking starting with an "N" is considered some level of problematic by the FAA, how about having
two airworthy aircraft painted with the same registration? To go back to the Spirit of St. Louis for a second, there are multiple airworthy replicas of the airplane, and at least both the EAA and
Old Rhinebeck examples have "N-X-211" painted on the wings and rudder. However, only the former is actually registered as the modern equivalent:
N211. The latter is
N211XC.
Not to get too off topic, but one other instance to wonder about: The registration of Amelia Earhart's Lockheed 10E Electra, NR16020, was
permanently retired by the FAA in 1988. Indeed, if you look up the modern equivalent,
N16020, on the FAA database it reads "permanently reserved". If the goal was for it to "never...be used by anyone ever again", then why was the
Museum of Flight's Lockheed Electra allowed to fly while marked as it? To be clear, technically the aircraft was registered as N72GT, but allowing the marking to be applied seems to violate the intent of removing it from use.
EDIT: So, I found a 1939 copy of
14 CFR 02 and there is nothing that specifically mentions a third letter. There is a "domestic aircraft for foreign delivery" section, but it just states that aircraft may display the registration of a foreign country, not a modified version of an American one. The only provisions for non-standard markings appear to be a cross, +, to indicate aircraft owned by a foreign individual and a bar, _, to indicate an uncertified aircraft. (Note, the latter is depicted in the text as an underscore, but seems possible that it is meant to represent a hyphen. This may explain the odd use of one on a Boeing 707 as
mentioned in a different thread.)