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Bristol Siddeley Cheetah 7-cylinder radials I believe.
My father trained as a navigator on Avro Ansons in South Africa in 1943 and 1944. He met my mother on leave before reporting for operations in late 1944. As a child I built many Airfix models; I can't remember why I built an Anson (but I still have it) but it was the only one that my father really cared about getting the detail right.
The one Dad flew had a gun turret, and as a trainer had a cine camera connected to the trigger. He told a ridiculous story (which I believe to be true) about how his pilot required him to fabricate the navigation record at 20 000 feet while they went elephant hunting at 250 feet. I know not whether they had live ammunition as well as film.
My first flight in an RAF aircraft, an Avro Anson on the 29th July 1960 at RAF Middleton St George, now Durham Teeside Airport. The last time I saw one was at the Shuttleworth Trust.
I do love the Anson especially the early WW2 variants.
An Anson along with its crew and specialist radio equipment were the unsung hero's of the "Battle of the Beams" by identifying the existence of the German "Crooked Leg" Knickebein radio targeting system for Luftwaffe bombers.
Once identified then effective counter measures were developed.
Come on Bambi get some
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