pmccarthy Posted Tuesday at 01:04 AM Posted Tuesday at 01:04 AM (edited) I took these photos of VH-IVI at Bankstown around 1971. the writing on the tail said Mustang P51-D R.J. Whitbread Motors Pty Ltd Kogarah 587-8011 VH-IVI was registered in June 1969 to warbird proponent Langdon Badger. He sold it to Sydney businessman Ray Whitbread in September 1970. In mid-1973 the aircraft struck the ground in a vertical dive near Windsor, NSW; destroying the Mustang and killing Ray Whitbread, who was practising aerobatics. The canopy detached and struck him, rendering him unconscious. Edited Tuesday at 01:08 AM by pmccarthy 1 1
440032 Posted Tuesday at 01:24 AM Posted Tuesday at 01:24 AM Whitbread Motors? Thanks for the tip and number - I need to book the car in for a service. 1
Marty_d Posted Tuesday at 01:56 AM Posted Tuesday at 01:56 AM Good luck, there aren't enough digits in the phone number. I think there's a few more users now compared to 54 years ago. 1
pmccarthy Posted Tuesday at 05:37 AM Author Posted Tuesday at 05:37 AM I looked this story up and the accident may have been a stall, with the pilot detaching the canopy to bail out. The entire aircraft disappeared into a crater in the ground and only the canopy was found intact some distance away. 1
Student Pilot Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago I have some old pics of this machine I took with a box Brownie, it visited Armidale. An impressive machine up close. In the olden days you could walk up to any machine parked at any airfield and have a close look and have a yarn to the pilot. 2
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