The Aviation Historian — January 2018

(lu) #1

AIR CORRESPONDENCE Letters to the Editor


8 THE AVIATION HISTORIAN Issue No 22

car in those early days, staying over for two
nights (no other way to handle the schedule in
those pre-Ryanair and pre-Easyjet days) was
another matter, but it was very well worth it.
Still today, looking to the left from my office
desk, I can still see my framed certificate
recording this tour pinned to the wall, with a
very much cherished signature of Charles Blair.
I just wanted you to know that, and to know
how much I enjoy receiving and reading TA H.
Keep it going!
Hubert Strasser Wallisellen, Zürich, Switzerland

“The Crash Comic” reborn
SIR — As a subscriber to The Aviation Historian, I
thought you might be interested in the material
contained in the now well and truly defunct
Australian Aviation Safety Digest. This digest was
published for many years by the variously-titled
Australian civil aviation authorities. We have a

perchance of changing Federal Government
Department titles with each change of
Commonwealth Government.
The digest was colloquially known as “The
Crash Comic” and the civil aviation authority at
the time ceased publication many years ago.
However, thanks to efforts by readers of the
online PPRuNe forum, the editions of the ASD
have been digitised. The following link will
provide access to the documents. I understand
that “dropbox” material downloads have a daily
limit — so “first in best dressed”:
http://www.pprune.org/pacific-general-
aviation-questions/600463-aviation-safety-
digests-now-available-digital.html
I hope this information is useful. I thoroughly
enjoy the articles in TA HTA HTA H, and I am amazed with , and I am amazed with
the amount of research that you conduct for each
and every topic.
Adrian CrombieSunbury, Victoria, Australia
TAH

SPITFIRE STUNNER! A modelling masterpiece


REGULAR READERS of TAHTAHTAH will know that we love it will know that we love it
when people make use of the journal in research and
other projects — and here is a humdinger of a scale
modelling venture.
Master modeller Peter Castle of East Sussex-based
Airscale has recently completed a^1 / 18 th-scale model
of Supermarine Spitfire FR.XIVe TZ138 in its racing
guise as CF-GMZ/“80” at the 1949 Cleveland Air
Races. The 25in-span litho-plate-panelled model took
18 months to build, and a previously unpublished
photograph in Juanita Franzi’s article in TAH
helped to clarify details. The result speaks for itself
— and in November the model won Best in Show at
the Scale Modelworld 2017 exhibition at Telford.

will know that we love it

Master modeller Peter Castle of East Sussex-based

Races. The 25in-span litho-plate-panelled model took

PETER CASTLE x 2

Free download pdf