TAYLORCRAFT AUSTER PLUS D
Specifications:
Manufacturer:
Model:
Section/Category
light-aircraft/for-saleDescription:
1943
AF 4010 HRS
ENG 155
Permit to April 2026
Very well known aircraft seen at all the flying, needs a new home. Absolute opportunity to acquire a bargain.
Built at Rearsby, Leicestershire, LB375 was the 89th aircraft produced from
an initial batch of 100 Auster Mk.Is for the Royal Air Force. It was initially
assigned to 653 Air Observation Post (AOP) Squadron at Penkhurst,
Kent, in December 1942. Formed that June, 653 AOP Sqn had flown de
Havilland Tiger Moths as an interim measure prior to receiving Austers.
LB375 was transferred to No. 43 Operational Training Unit at RAF Larkhill,
Wiltshire, in March 1943 for use in the tuition of army co-operation air
observers. With the introduction of improved Auster variants, the aircraft
was allocated to 451 Squadron Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) for light
liaison duties in March 1945. Equipped with Supermarine Spitfire XVIs, 451
Sqn was based at RAF Matlaske, Norfolk when issued LB375.
From August 1945, the unit received Spitfire F.14s in anticipation of
deploying to Germany on September 14, 1945. Initially stationed
at Fassberg, 45 miles south of Hamburg, 451 Sqn moved to Wunstorf, 14
miles northwest of Hanover, on 27th of that month. The squadron flew from
RAF Gatow, west of Berlin, between November 28 and December 30, 1945
before being disbanded at Wunstorf on January 21, 1946. LB375 was
demobbed in March of that year and allocated the civilian registration G-
AHGW.
The aircraft was returned to Rearsby, where it was civilianised before being
sold to London Aeroplane Club at PanshangerAerodrome, Hertfordshire, in
1946. The following year, it was acquired by Short Brothers and Harland
Ltd and based at Rochester, Kent.
G-AHGW then passed through a number of private owners before being
purchased in 1975 by Carl Butler. Having repainted the aircraft in its RAF
colours, Butler would later fly it as part of the Military Auster Flight
alongside Mk.V G-AJGJ/RT486, AOP.6 G-BNGE/TW536, T.7 G-
ASAJ/WE569 and AOP.9 G-BKVK/WZ662
The aircraft was stored in 1996, being acquired with another Auster I, G-
AHSD/LB323, by Brent Owen in 2016.
LB375 is currently owned by Simon Tilling the CEO of the Light Aircraft
Association and has been flown in by Emma Taylor who recently converted
to the type
LB375 is understood to have had one of the longest in-service flying
careers of any World War Two Auster.