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Hurricane Mk.IIb BE505 (registered G-HHII), the last flying "Hurribomber", Originally restored in 2005 by Hawker Restorations Ltd in the UK, now the world's only two-seat Hurricane and is now maintained by Duxford-based Aircraft Restoration Company.
The Hawker Hurricane is a British single-seat fighter aircraft of the 1930s–40s which was designed and predominantly built by Hawker Aircraft Ltd. for service with ...
Following a seven-year restoration, the museum's Hawker Hurricane returned in 2019. [3] Earlier that year, it began restoring its CF-100. [4] The museum's annex, a building used to store aircraft from its collection, had its fabric roof badly damaged in a windstorm in March 2023. This was the second time the building had been damaged by weather.
Hawker Sea Hurricane Mk.Ib (Z7015) arrives at the 2016 RIAT. The Sea Hurricane Mk IA was a Hurricane Mk I modified by Hawker or General Aircraft Limited. They were modified to be carried by CAM ships (catapult-armed merchantman). These were cargo ships equipped with a catapult for launching a single aircraft, but without facilities to recover them.
North American B-25J-25-NC 44-30861 (under restoration) Bell P-63 King cobra - 43-11137 (under restoration); [11] the museum has five more in storage; Douglas A-20 Boston (displayed as found) Nakajima B5N2 Kate (very large fuselage and wing section) Douglas C-47 Dakota (fuselage from Band of Brothers) Hawker Hurricane (wreck) [12]
Hawker Hurricane I: V7497 SD-X CAA Reg-G-HRLI Owned-Hurricane 501 Operations LLP Operated-Aircraft Restoration Company Ltd Hawker Hurricane IIB: Z2315 Royal Air Force – No. 111 Squadron markings, coded JU-E, aircraft recovered from Russia Hawker Hunter F.6A: XE627 Royal Air Force – No. 65 Squadron markings, on loan from the United States ...
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Belgian Air Force. Belgium bought 20 Hurricane Mk.Is (early models with fabric covered wings and fixed two-blade propeller) in 1939 and a licence to build 80 more, of which only two were completed, with most of the aircraft being lost during the German invasion when they were bombed at the military airfield at Schaffen near Diest on 10 May 1940.