Mainly a day of gathering information today, three key points learned. Firstly about the only (certainly flying) Gauntlet in the world in Finland, albeit not with the "proper" Mercury engine. I watched 28 minutes of an in cockpit flying display of this aircraft, and right at the end as the pilot got out of the plane I managed to grab this screen-shot of the seat etc.
So much information in this picture, with the obvious caveat of course that this is a machine flying 80 years after the RAF ones, but the AIMS seat design is confirmed and that interesting apparently leather "handle?" on the port side of the seat. Also the "handbrake" on the starboard side. (I have since been informed that the leather “handle” is in fact a patch designed to prevent chaffing from the parachute metalwork (short for more technical terms). You can also see it on many British planes of the period like the Gladiator and the Hurricane. The “handbrake” on the starboard side is a seat-adjusting lever.) Other cockpit shots which include quite a bit of modern equipment, I need to sort out what is and what isn't!
3 attached images. Click to enlarge.