Bomber_12th
SOH-CM-2025
I really like the looks of this development! With what is available on the market, we could always use a more accurate external model especially.
One thing, though...
This aircraft has nothing to do with the Battle of Britain, it was only a Battle of France veteran. It was shot down/ditched on the beach in France a couple months before the Battle of Britain began, therefore there should be no Battle of Britain reference to this particular aircraft. The aircraft was restored to being, in exact detail, to how it was at the time it was shot down during the Battle of France (the earliest of Spitfire forms restored/flying), which may be only accurate to some Battle of Britain-era Spitfires.
Since earlier this year, Spitfire P9374 (depicted) is now based at/flying in the US, operating out of the Brookhaven Airport in New York, registered as N92SQ. The new/current owner is Ronald Lauder, heir to the Estee Lauder fortune.
Wombat666, the Spitfire Mk.1 you're thinking of is N3200, which was also owned by Thomas Kaplan and restored to the exact same standard as P9374 (it too having ditched on a beach during the Battle of France). Guy Martin showed up a few times during its multi-year restoration in order to produce the film about it. N3200 was donated to the IWM Duxford, which continues to keep the aircraft flying/operating out of Duxford Aerodrome.
I look forward to hopefully seeing the accurate anodized-finish on the main instrument panel section, as reproduced to original spec on the restoration(s) - P9374 and N3200 - and the gaping hole/missing flap gauge in the instrument panel since they weren't fitted on these aircraft.
One thing, though...
This aircraft has nothing to do with the Battle of Britain, it was only a Battle of France veteran. It was shot down/ditched on the beach in France a couple months before the Battle of Britain began, therefore there should be no Battle of Britain reference to this particular aircraft. The aircraft was restored to being, in exact detail, to how it was at the time it was shot down during the Battle of France (the earliest of Spitfire forms restored/flying), which may be only accurate to some Battle of Britain-era Spitfires.
Since earlier this year, Spitfire P9374 (depicted) is now based at/flying in the US, operating out of the Brookhaven Airport in New York, registered as N92SQ. The new/current owner is Ronald Lauder, heir to the Estee Lauder fortune.
Wombat666, the Spitfire Mk.1 you're thinking of is N3200, which was also owned by Thomas Kaplan and restored to the exact same standard as P9374 (it too having ditched on a beach during the Battle of France). Guy Martin showed up a few times during its multi-year restoration in order to produce the film about it. N3200 was donated to the IWM Duxford, which continues to keep the aircraft flying/operating out of Duxford Aerodrome.
I look forward to hopefully seeing the accurate anodized-finish on the main instrument panel section, as reproduced to original spec on the restoration(s) - P9374 and N3200 - and the gaping hole/missing flap gauge in the instrument panel since they weren't fitted on these aircraft.