[BITList] Fwd: Spitfire - The Legend Lives On.

Michael Feltham ismay at mjfeltham.plus.com
Fri Oct 28 14:39:28 BST 2016


Some terrific photos !

Mike

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> Legends at full throttle. Photographer captures pin-sharp images of the final 55 airworthy Spitfires using just a handheld camera.    Air-to-air photographer John Dibbs spent years hanging out of fighter planes to capture stunning shots of Spitfires·   Using skill and experience of former RAF pilot Tim Ellison, Dibbs flew to within 15ft of the hugely iconic planes.    Battled extreme wind and noise to shoot through open canopy with handheld camera to take remarkable images.
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> As they soar across the sky, it is hard to believe more than three-quarters of a century has passed since these glorious fighting machines were helping repel the mighty German Luftwaffe. Almost equally incredible is how pin-sharp these photographs are of some of the remaining 55 airworthy Spitfires, as the planes show off the elegance and manoeuvrability that made them the stuff of legend.
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> Photographer John Dibbs captured the remarkable images, which have now been published in a book, in a plane flown within 15 ft of the Spitfires by former RAF pilot Tim Ellison.
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> Splendid sight: Spitfire AR614 tears through the sky over the white cliffs of Dover.
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> Momentous: Photos were shot through an open canopy with a handheld camera - including this of Mk IX Spitfire PL344 (right) and Mk XVI Spitfire TD248 (left) over Britain.
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> Historic: The result of the photographer’s hard work is a collection of stunning pin-sharp images, celebrated in a new book to mark the 80th anniversary 
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> Ceremonial: The Battle of Britain memorial flight's Merlin powered Mk IIa Spitfire P7350, complete with brown and green camouflage.
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> The oldest airworthy Spitfire in the world and the only one still flying to have actually fought in the Battle of Britain, Spitfire P7350 was first flown into action by 21-year-old Polish Pilot Officer Ludwik Martel ( above ).
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> He was a former cadet officer in the Polish Air Force who arrived in England in early 1940 following the Nazi invasion of his homecountry the year before.
> Martel made his first ‘kill’ in another Spitfire, while on patrol with 603 Squadron when he shot down a German Messerschmitt 109 over the Channel about six miles east of Dover. 
> On October 25, 1940, while with 603 Squadron, ‘P7’ was damaged in a combat and by the subsequent forced landing.
> The aircraft was hit by cannon fire in the left wing and Martel was wounded by shrapnel in the left side of his body and legs. But he still managed to bring the aircraft back down through cloud and then – in pain and fighting to stay conscious – he landed it in a field near Hastings.
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> The Spitfire was sold for scrap in 1948 for £25 – but luckily its historical significance was recognised.
> It was later donated to the RAF Museum at Colerne near Bristol –  before being restored to take part in the 1969 epic war film Battle of Britain.
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> Speed: The pilot of Mk XVl Spitfire RW382 - powered by a Packhard Merlin engine - glances towards Dibbs as he races across the sky, reaching heights of up to 9,000 ft and speeds of 250 mph, Dibbs had to contend with extreme wind and noise to shoot through an open canopy with a handheld camera. His glorious photographs grace the pages of a book marking the 80th anniversary of the Spitfire’s maiden flight.
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> The aircraft he photographed include a Mk I Spitfire N3200 that was shot down over the beaches of Dunkirk in 1940, and lay buried for more than 40 years until it was revealed by a huge storm. Incredibly, it was recovered and restored to airworthy condition.
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> Similarly, Mk I X4650 crashed into a riverbank in Cleveland following a mid-air collision in 1940, and remained hidden until the drought of 1976 uncovered the wreckage. It was painstakingly reconstructed and flew for the first time in 2011.
> Mk IX MH434 which was built in 1943, piloted by South African flying ace Sailor Malan, and has never been subject to a rebuild – also features.
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> Dibbs, 50, has gone on more than 1,100 photographic sorties over the past 20 years. But most of the incredibly-detailed snaps of the last Spitfires were shot in the last seven years over southern England.
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> This Spitfire had seven confirmed ‘kills’ – six of them with Squadron Leader Geoffrey Northcott at the controls – after it was delivered to the RAF in June 1942.
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> But a ground collision cut short the aircraft’s successful career.
> After the war, she was used to train service personnel on the ground, then served as gate guard at a number of RAF stations until 1967, when she was used as a static aircraft in Guy Hamilton’s Battle of Britain movie. After her first silver-screen experience she was back guarding the gate at RAF Wattisham until 1989 when she was transported to RAF St. Athan, where she remained in storage until 1993.
> Following a full restoration, EP120 returned to the skies in September 1995 and has been a popular performer with the crowds at air shows and pilots ever since.
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> Top: Mk Vb Spitfire EP120 powered by a Rolls Royce Merlin. The plane was taken on by the RAF in May 1942 and assigned to 501 squadron. 
> She scored six of her seven confirmed kills with Sqn Ldr Geoffrey Northcott (above) at the helm.
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> Camouflaged: Spitfire MT928 was built as MV154 at Southampton in 1944. She was delivered to 6 MU (Maintenance Unit) on September 15, 1944 from where she started a long trip by boat to Sydney, Australia where she arrived on November 24 the same year.
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> Spitfire N3200 (left), the oldest Spitfire still flying, was fully restored after being shot down over Dunkirk in May 1940 and reappearing from the sands in 1986. Mk IX Spitfire MH434 (right) is one of the most famous Spitfire's still flying.
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> Look to the skies: A stunning image shows a 'squadron' of seven Spitfire's and two Hurricanes flying above the clouds over Britain
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> Take off: Mk Vb Spitfire BM597. Mr Dibbs, 50, said his line of work has taken him on over 1,100 photographic sorties over the last 20 years.  While the majority fought the Luftwaffe in World War Two one of them is the last to 'fire its guns in anger on King's business' in the Malayan Emergency in the 1950s.
> Mr Dibbs, who has snapped Concorde, the Red Arrows and F16 planes before, also praised the skill of the Spitfire pilots to fly in formation with Mr Ellison's camera aircraft.
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> He added: 'The Spitfire is probably the most famous and beautiful World War Two plane in the world.  
> While commanding a squadron covering the Dunkirk evacuation, Squadron Leader Geoffrey Stephenson was shot down in Spitfire F IA N3200 on May 26, 1940. He was taken prisoner, spending more than five years in captivity.
> He managed to land the aircraft on a beach at Sangatte, near Calais, then walked about 100 miles through enemy territory, evading capture, before ending up in Brussels, where he went to the U.S. embassy – which refused to take him in, as the country was not yet involved in the war.
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> Shine: Spitfire N3200 (front) the oldest Spitfire still flying and now fully restored after being shot down over Dunkirk in May 1940 before it was found in 1986. Spitfire P9374 (back) is also a Mk1.
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> Squadron Leader Geoffrey Stephenson (above) was shot down in Spitfire F IA N3200 (top) on May 26, 1940. The plane lay buried under tidal sands on a beach at Sangatte, near Calais, until it was rediscovered and salvaged in 1986.
> He then surrendered and became a prisoner of war. After multiple escape attempts from other PoW camps, he was sent to the infamous Colditz Castle. 
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> Following the war, Stephenson served as the personal pilot for King George VI.
> He was killed in Florida in 1954, aged of 44, in an accident while test flying a plane as part of an exchange tour with the U.S. Air Force. Spitfire N3200 remained on the beach and soon sank into the tidal sand.
> It was forgotten about until unusually strong currents revealed its remains. It was rediscovered and salvaged from the beach in 1986. It was restored to flight in 2014 – with the markings worn when it was downed.
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> ‘One of the most exhilarating things is about how close you get,’ he says. 'Sat atop the English countryside with a MkI or Mk V off your wing is not something you just witness, you feel it. ‘It is an extreme working environment. I always shoot Spitfires through clean air and when the canopy is open it gets a bit chilly up there. 'I have to overcome the wind and slipstream, which are incredibly strong, as well as the noise and speed. But I’ve been doing it long enough not to get freaked out or airsick.’
> He added: 'I am thrilled with the book. I am an air to air photographer so I fly in one like-for-like plane to shoot another.
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> 'A lot of people think the pictures are fake because they are so close up but it is due to Tim's skill as a pilot to get the plane exactly where I want it to be that enables me to get these pictures.
> 'This book is to honour the veterans who flew them and there is no finer compliment than to have one tell me I have captured the spirit of the Spitfire in my photographs.'   
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> Modified: This image shows Mk XlV Spitfire MV268 with its wings clipped to help improve low level performance and roll rate.
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> Fierce: Mk 3 Seafire PP972 (top), the Royal Navy version of the Spitfire built for aircraft carriers and powered by a Rolls-Royce Merlin engine. Mk IX Spitfire MH434 (left) - one of the most famous planes still capable of taking to the skies.
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> Mr Dibbs, originally from North London but now living in Seattle, WA, said his aim was to capture Spitfires that have a combat history.
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> Commander: Mr Dibbs, who has snapped Concorde, the Red Arrows and F16 planes before, praised the skill of the Spitfire pilots to fly in formation.
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> Adventure: Spitfire NH749 in an Indian colour scheme was built at Supermarine in Aldermaston and powered by a Rolls-Royce Griffon engine.
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> Fly past: The stunning war plane is seen gliding over water as the sun glistens off its body, colouring it a bronze-gold shade.
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> Propeller: Mr Dibbs said of his images: 'A lot of people think the pictures are fake because they are so close up but it is due to Tim's skill as a pilot to get the plane exactly where I want it to be that enables me to get these pictures'.
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> Undercarriage: The new book captures the last Spitfires in stunning air to air action. Soaring into the skies above the green and pleasant land they so spectacularly fought for 76 years ago, they are the last of the few airworthy Spitfires left.
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> Intense: Rolls-Royce's own Spitfire PS853 - an unarmed, high-altitude photo reconnaissance aircraft, built at Supermarine, Southampton.
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> Monumental: The blue coloured Spitfire is powered by a Rolls-Royce Griffon engine and has a top speed of 446 mph and a ceiling of 42,000 ft.
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> Shell: A photograph of Spitfire NH749 when it was rediscovered in Patna in 1977. It has now been fully restored and flies once more.
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> Squadron Leader Geoffrey Wellum, 94, who was the youngest Spitfire pilot in the Battle of Britain and was awarded the DFC, writes in the book’s foreword of the first time he flew a Spitfire. ‘She seemed to just slip through the air and flow about the sky, responding eagerly and lightly to every demand made of her by control input... We were as one.’
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