In all, six Percival P6 
      Mew Gull aircraft were produced. Of these, only one - G-AEXF - survives, 
      and that has been rebuilt twice - once in 1978 to it's original factory 
      specifications, and more recently, to its Cape Records configuration. John 
      Cull - himself a former Kings Cup winner and for many years one of 
      Britain's top racing pilots, is also in the process of building a replica 
      of XF.
      
      
      The original Mew Gull was 
      the first civil aircraft to exceed a speed of 200 miles per hour. Later 
      versions introduced steady improvements, and the fastest speed recorded by 
      G-AEXF in its 1938 Kings Cup configuration was in excess of 270 mph. At 
      sea level, it was faster than a Hawker Hurricane.
      One of the entrants in the 
      1936 Schlesinger Race from Portsmouth to Johannesburg was Major Allister 
      Miller, regarded by many as the father of civil aviation in South Africa. 
      Major Miller was unfortunately forced to abandon the race in Belgrade, and 
      his aircraft, a Mew Gull named The Golden City and having the 
      registration ZS-AHM, was returned to England where it was subsequently 
      bought by Bill Humble. Humble was however about to get married, and soon 
      had second thoughts - under the circumstances - regarding the suitability 
      of the aircraft. He therefore accepted an offer to swap it for a Leopard 
      Moth owned by Alex Henshaw, and the Mew Gull was re-registered in 
      Henshaw's name as G-AEXF. Thus, XF had a close association with South 
      Africa even before the flight which made it famous.
      The aircraft underwent 
      considerable modification for the King's Cup race of 1938, which Alex 
      Henshaw won at a record speed of 236.25 mph. 
      Following this success, XF 
      was further modified for the Cape Records flight. These modifications 
      included such things as increased fuel capacity (87 imperial gallons), 
      modified instrumentation, and a retractable navigation light mounted just 
      behind the cockpit canopy. The ARB were unwilling to issue a certificate 
      of airworthiness before a second navigation light was fitted underneath 
      the aircraft. Henshaw pointed out that since he would be the only person 
      flying at night over Central Africa, this would serve no purpose other 
      than to slow the aircraft down by several miles per hour, and the issue 
      was not raised again.
      Essex Aero
      Much of the customization 
      for both for the 1938 King's Cup and for the Cape Records attempt was 
      carried out by a small aero engineering company Essex Aero Ltd, based at 
      Gravesend, London and run by Jack Cross. Alex Henshaw gives Cross much of 
      the credit for the outstanding performance and reliability displayed by 
      the Mew Gull in such diversely demanding roles as King's Cup racer and 
      Cape Records challenger. Jack Cross was also involved in the 1978 
      restoration of G-AEXF to her factory configuration.
      
      
      Alex Henshaw, Jack 
      Cross and restored Mew Gull, 1978 (From The Flight of the Mew Gull)
      Panel and 
      Instrumentation
      Instrumentation was 
      extensively modified for the Cape Records attempt. There was no 
      turn-and-bank indicator, but instead a very stable gyro compass, which 
      Alex Henshaw regards as critical to the success of the flight. The was 
      also a large Huson P5 magnetic compass mounted on a bracket just in front 
      of the pilot, and a chronometer with three stopwatches for dead reckoning.
      
      
      
      Alex Henshaw taxiing 
      the Mew Gull