Colley, Robert Charles
Killed in Flying Accident 1941-09-26

Birth Date: 1919
Born:
Fred W. Colley & Mary Colley, of Toronto, Ontario.
Home: Denzil, Saskatchewan
Enlistment:
Enlistment Date: Unknown
Service
RCAF
Unit
60 OTU- Operational Training Unit (RAF)
Base
RAF Leconfield
Rank
Pilot Officer
Position
Pilot Officer
Service Numbers
J/5979
Prev: R/74765
Home

Colley lost his life when his Defiant aircraft V-1138 crashed at East Fortune, Scotland 1941-09-26.
Boulton Paul Defiant

Boulton Paul P.82 Defiant, RAF (Serial No. L7026), coded PS*V, c1941.
The Boulton Paul Defiant is a British interceptor aircraft that served with the Royal Air Force (RAF) during World War II. The Defiant was designed and built by Boulton Paul Aircraft as a "turret fighter", without any fixed forward-firing guns, also found in the Blackburn Roc of the Royal Navy.
In combat, the Defiant was found to be reasonably effective at destroying bombers but was vulnerable to the Luftwaffe's more manoeuvrable, single-seat Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighters. The lack of forward-firing armament proved to be a great weakness in daylight combat and its potential was realised only when it was converted to a night fighter. It eventually equipped thirteen squadrons in this role, compared to just two squadrons as a day-fighter. In mid-1942 it was replaced by better performing night-fighters, the Bristol Beaufighter and de Havilland Mosquito.
The Defiant continued to find use in gunnery training, target towing, electronic countermeasures and air-sea rescue. Among RAF pilots it had the nickname "Daffy".Wikipedia