Monday 11 March 2024

Curtiss P40E ZK-RMH gone.

 The Curtiss P40E Kittyhawk ZK-RMH was cancelled from the New Zealand register on March 1st.

Sir Minty did a lengthy blog post on it in January of 2013 which I have re-posted below with a few additional photos

*******************.

Posted Saturday 19 January 2013

Curtis P 40E Kittyhawk ZK-RMH/NZ 3009 - Further History

I posted about Curtis P 40E Kittyhawk ZK-RMH/NZ 3009 at Masterton in a previous post, and Grant Newman has come back with some old photos of it, which set me off on researching the story of this historical aircraft.
In fact it is one of only two surviving wartime RNZAF aircraft that exist as flying aircraft today. (The other is Corsair ZK-COR which is also based at Masterton). 
It was originally manufactured as USAAF serial no 41-25158 for the RAF where its serial number was to have been ET 482. However following Pearl Harbour it was diverted to New Zealand as one of the first batch of Kittyhawks to be delivered in April 1942. It was bought on charge on 2 April 1942 and allocated to Unit 36 at Hobsonville as NZ3009.   It then was allocated to 14 Squadron, then to 17 Squadron then to No 2 OTU at Ohakea.
Amazingly, it was based at Masterton with 14 Squadron around for about a year in 1942, so 60 years later it is still there!
After the war it was flown to the Rukuhia storage facility along with more than 100 other Kittyhawks, to be scrapped (out of the more than 300 Kittyhawks operated by the RNZAF).  It was rescued in 1959 by a group of schoolboys led by Charles Darby, who scraped together 25 pounds to buy it. NZ 3009 was chosen partly because it was nearest to the gate!
It eventually found its way to MOTAT on loan from 02-1968, and it was displayed there for some time as a "composite" aircraft with the wings of NZ 3201.  It is photo'd here at MOTAT by Grant Newman in 1993.  It was taken back by its owner and restoration to flying condition was commenced by Pacific Aviation Ltd which had been formed to rebuild P 40's at East Tamaki.  This firm folded, and the assets were taken over by Pioneer Aircraft Restorations (Garth Hogan).
Pioneer Aircraft Restorations completed ZK-RMH, and the tail is photo'd here by Philip Treweek at Ardmore in January 1998.  By this time it was owned by The Old Flying Machine Company (Ray and Mark Hanna, hence the registration ZK-RMH I assume).  Does anyone have a photo of it in silver with RMH, before it was painted?  It was painted in Tauranga in February 1998 in an RNZAF colour scheme and appeared at Wings Over Wanaka in 1998.

Photo above taken at Wanaka om 10-04-1998.
It was the exported to England in April 1999 for The Old Flying Machine Company and was based at Duxford.  It also flew as part of the Breitling Fighter Group (as was Corsair ZK-COR).  It is photo'd above in its RNZAF colour scheme by Grant Newman at an airshow at the former RAF station at North Weald in 1999.  It has the Breitling logo in front of the cockpit.
Sometime after 2002 the aircraft was re-painted in this interesting colour scheme.  I always thought is was the colours of The Flying Tigers (Claire Chennault's 1st American Volunteer Group of fighter pilots who flew Kittyhawks out of Kunming in South Western China in the early days of WW 2), but that is not the case.  Some research by a Chinese friend found that ZK-RMH is painted in the colours of Chinese fighter ace Xu Hua Jiang, who was one of the 2 most famous aces in the Nationalist Chinese Air Force in WW 2.  This aircraft 88/663/P-11151 was one of 27 P 40E's delivered to China in early 1943.  It has an inscription in Chinese characters on the nose which is "Tai Gong Lin" which translates as ""By order of a respected senior person".  This phrase goes back in Chinese history to a famous Prime Minister in the Zhou Dynasty (1050 to 256 BC) and illustrates a difference in Chinese verse American thinking.  When American pilots told Xu Hua Jiang that they painted the names of their wives or mothers or girlfriends on their aeroplanes, he thought it better to acknowledge Chinese history on his plane.  Of course, the NZ 3009 on ZK-RMH is out of place in this colour scheme.
ZK-RMH/NZ 3009 returned to New Zealand in 1997 and was registered to Pacific Aircraft Ltd of Auckland on 4/12/1997.  Ownership transferred to The Old Flying Machine Company (NZ) Ltd of Auckland on 01-04-1998, and then to Airtight Trust of Masterton on 31/8/2005. 
Photo below taken on 11-04-2009.

Photo below on 20-01-2011
Photo 31-03-2012 at Ohakea by Aaron Murphy.
Ownership moved to The Old Stick and Rudder Company of Auckland on 29/5/2012, although it is still based at Masterton.
Above and below 18-01-2013.
You can imagine the forward view from that cockpit !

Above & below at Omaka on 02-04-2015
Last three shots from Wanaka on 25-03-2016.




Adding to Sir Minty's fine effort above.
It first flew after is restoration on 19-12-1997.
It was shipped to the UK in April 1999, remaining on the ZK register.
Its NZ registration was cancelled on 07-03-2003 for it to become G-CCBE with Classic Aviation Ltd c/o The old Flying Machine Company of Duxford.
This UK registration was cancelled on 12-06-2003 for its return to NZ again as ZK-RMH from 18-06-2003 with The Old Flying Machine Co (NZ) Ltd of Auckland.
In May 2004 it went to Pioneer Restoration for a two seat dual control conversion.
It was re-listed with Air Tight Trust of Nelson on 31-08-2005 and then to The Old Stick & Rudder Co Ltd of Auckland from 14-05-1012.
It final NZ listed owner was Oliver Carl Wilbur Wulff with a UAE address from 10-01-2018.
It has been stored for some time at Masterton pending outcome of legal proceedings.
Its NZ registration was cancelled on 01-03-2024 for its move to Australia where it became VH-AK4 with Kennedy Aviation Pty Ltd of Gunnedah, NSW from 06-03-2024.

2 comments:

  1. "In fact it is one of only two surviving wartime RNZAF aircraft that exist as flying aircraft today" - I'm a bit late but when this piece was originally written two ex-RNZAF P-40s (NZ3094/VH-KTY and NZ3125/VH-ZOC) were flying in Australia.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I meant to start my comment with "What a terrific look back at this special aircraft's history, well done gents"! Sorry for coming off as such an angry nerd!

      Delete