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Reply #30 - Jan 15th, 2005 at 4:52am

Hagar   Offline
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My Spitfire Girl
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Quote:
Whoops sorry Doug... Embarrassed

Not your fault. I should have been quicker on the trigger. Wink

I've seen it before & always assumed the explanation in my quote to be correct.
 

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Reply #31 - Jan 15th, 2005 at 4:57am

ozzy72   Offline
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Aye Doug, it was just in this case they used the ? marking as they couldn't prove the exact origins of the plane. It was on the placard facing the Hart if memory serves Wink
 

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There are two types of aeroplane, Spitfires and everything else that wishes it was a Spitfire!
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Reply #32 - Jan 15th, 2005 at 5:03am

Hagar   Offline
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My Spitfire Girl
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Quote:
Aye Doug, it was just in this case they used the ? marking as they couldn't prove the exact origins of the plane. It was on the placard facing the Hart if memory serves Wink

I'm not sure about that. If it was written on the placard I must have missed it. Here's the full quote from the link I posted.

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Curtiss Kittyhawk Mk. IV
112 Squadron, Royal Air Force
pilot: Sergeant G.F. Davis
Cutella, Italy, April 1944

Here is the Mk.IV Kittyhawk (P-40N) of 112 Sqn, as operated from April to June 1944 in Italy. The main colour scheme and markings are basically of the perfectly standard desert style finish, but with two things worthy of note. The upper surface camouflage colours are reversed on this aircraft, which probably indicates that it has been repainted from its original USAAF style of camouflage and hence the dark and light areas are where they should really be rather than the other way round as happened when Dark Earth/Dark Green aircraft simply had their green areas repainted with Mid Stone.

The second thing is the use of the query punctuation mark as an individual aircraft ident marking; the use of such symbols and shapes (such as, eg, colons, semi-colons, and diamonds) was not unusual in Italy when a squadron had more than 26 aircraft on strength, and the use of "?" was the most common, even at times in the UK itself. Indeed, the "?" mark was often used to indicate the aircraft of the squadron commander, though not always so as in the case of this aircraft. Once again this is painted over the top of the serial number, FX740.

This aircraft again also has British radio equipment with no wire ariels, just the mast behind the canopy and whip on the rear fuselage.
 

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Reply #33 - Jan 15th, 2005 at 11:05am

C   Offline
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The most famous case of the ? marking was with 32Sqn. This was illustrated by David Penell's Spit IX MJ730 in the UK in the mid 90's carrying the codes GZ-?. The story behind this was that when OC 32Sqn was asked which letter he wanted, he replied that he was not sure. Hence, the next time he went to his aircraft, there was a "?", and from then on I think the aircraft was known as the "Sqn commanders query", or something like that...

The aircraft is now with Jerry Yagen in the US...

http://www.militaryairshows.net/spits/s96-730.jpg

Charlie
 
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