Thank you for your offers of assistance. After poking around more on the internet, I found a free font called Aileron — How appropos! — that seems nearly identical to the font used for the registration numbers of the TBM slurry bomber. The only difference I noted was that the lower-case “l” has a bit of a curved tail, but I don’t need an “l”.
I downloaded the font, added it to my word processing program, and have already sent a PDF of the registration numbers to a company in Richmond, BC, a suburb of Vancouver, that prints decals for model railroaders.
The font is certainly close enough to the original to be used. Besides which, the fonts used on aircraft are often changed when livery is changed. Later photographs of the same aircraft show registration numbers in an italic font.
I’m basing my model on this photograph of a TBM-3, built in 1945, that I took a few hours before my airplane crash in 1962.
That TBM-3 may not have been the TBM that I tried to photograph as it dropped a load of borate fire retardant on a small fire in the Black Range in Southwestern New Mexico. Nevertheless, that’s the aircraft I’m trying to replicate. (It was built in 1945, continued to fly throughout most of the 20th Century, was refurbished as a torpedo bomber, and now resides in an air museum in Texas.)
The TBM that I tried to photograph as it dropped borate slurry on a small fire in New Mexico’s Black Range might have been this one, an Avenger 35:
That Avenger 35 was “on duty” the same day as my airplane crash. The gentleman at the left in this photograph, which I took, is Jack Foster, the fire boss for the Gila National Forest who offered me my “crash ride” the Beech T-34B Mentor bird-dog plane.
The Avenger 35, a variant of the Avenger TBM-3S, was almost new, having been built for the Royal Canadian Navy as an anti-submarine aircraft in 1960. According to the Aviation Safety Network database, the aircraft crashed on take-off at Elko Municipal Airport in on September 6, 1966. The pilot survived, but the aircraft was written off.
Bob
P.S. Unlike some Finescale members, I happen to think that the TBM is a very attractive aircraft! I guess I just have good taste!