DH.88 Comets in foreign service
After the MacRobertson air race both G-ACSP "Black Magic" and the unnamed G-ACSR were sold to foreign buyers.
G-ACSP was sold to the Portugese government where she was reregistered and renamed "Salazar". It was hoped to use the aircraft to establish a Lisbon - Rio de Janeiro speed record, but was damaged during the take-off in Portugal and the attempt cancelled. Amy Johnson attempted to buy the aircaft back from Portugal, but was unsuccessful, and the aircraft languished, forgotten, in a hangar. But the hulk was rediscovered, and the aircraft is currently undergoing restoration in Derby, UK.
Interestingly a flying replica of G-ACSR (the green Comet) is also being built, so potentially all 3 MacRobertson Comets will soon be flying again in the UK.
G-ACSR came back to the UK, and was used to deliver the Christmas mail to the Belgian Congo, having been named "Queen Astrid" for the event. It was then sold to France and modified to receive a baggage bay in the nose to be used as a mailplane to West Africa. The limited payload however meant that the aircraft was not suitable for the task. France also order the production of another Comet, also with a baggage nose bay, and this became the only "commercial" aircraft, rather than "racer" built. The French investigated using the Comet as a military aircraft, but like the RAF, found the DH.88 unsuitable.
Both French Comets were then pushed to the back of the hangar at Étampes. Photos from German "tourists" of the hangar in 1940 clearly show the 2 dilapidated airframes, and they would have been disposed of during the Occupation.