Civil Civil Proctors have been registered in Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Denmark, Egypt, Finland, France, Germany, Gold Coast, Iceland, India, Ireland, Italy, Kenya, Lebanon, Morocco, New Zealand, Portugal, Rhodesia, South Africa, Southern Rhodesia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Transjordan, Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Military ; •
Royal Australian Air Force •
Governor-General's Flight RAAF operated one Proctor from 1945 to 1947. ; •
Belgian Air Force •
367 Squadron received four P.31C delivered in June 1947, one in October and one in March 1948. Operated as liaison aircraft until 1950. Last withdrawn from use 1954. ; •
Royal Canadian Air Force used Proctors by a number of Canadian units in the RAF as a communications aircraft. ; •
Czechoslovak Air Force in exile in the United Kingdom had one aircraft in service from 1944 to 1945. ; •
Royal Danish Air Force (RDAF) operated six P.44 Mk. III between November 1945 and November 1951. First aircraft operated by RDAF after World War II. ; •
Armée de l'Air received 18 Proctor IVs between September 1945 and May 1946 for use by ERN 703 (Radio Navigation School) in Pau. When the navigation training was transferred to Morocco in 1949 the Proctors were replaced by
Ansons and 16 Proctors went to the civil market. ; •
Italian Air Force bought one former civil Proctor V in 1954. ; •
Royal Jordanian Air Force ; •
Lebanese Air Force bought 3 in May 1949, the Proctor was the first military plane purchased by the recently created air force of the back then new country. ; •
Royal Netherlands Air Force received one Proctor III in June 1946 (scrapped in February 1951) and 10 Proctor IVs in June 1947. Used as liaison aircraft they were all scrapped in October 1953. ; •
Polish Air Force in Great Britain operated a few aircraft for liaison duties. Example aircraft: DX190, LZ603. ; •
Syrian Army bought four new Proctor IVs in 1946. ;: •
Royal Air Force •
No. 24 Squadron RAF •
No. 31 Squadron RAF •
No. 117 Squadron RAF •
No. 173 Squadron RAF •
No. 267 Squadron RAF •
No. 510 Squadron RAF •
Middle East Communications Squadron RAF •
No. 2 Radio School RAF •
No. 4 Radio School RAF •
No. 2 Signals School RAF •
No. 4 Signals School RAF •
Fleet Air Arm •
752 Naval Air Squadron •
754 Naval Air Squadron •
755 Naval Air Squadron •
756 Naval Air Squadron •
758 Naval Air Squadron •
771 Naval Air Squadron ; •
United States Army Air Forces operated loaned RAF aircraft as communications aircraft for use in the United Kingdom.
Notable owners •
Nevil Shute flew his new Proctor V from England to Australia in 1948 and terminated the return flight in Italy, 1,500 miles short of his goal, after a ground loop caused by a crosswind landing damaged the undercarriage. Italian bureaucracy delayed the importation of replacement parts and he was forced to return to England by commercial airline. The adventure is described in the book
Flight of fancy by his passenger James Riddell.The journey would have been a remarkable achievement even 70 years later using modern radio and navigation aids while in the immediate post war years was a truly daunting challenge. ==Surviving aircraft==