Yep a very accurate rendition of Fighting 7 if I recall. All the colors and numbers were Navy accurate, something not seen too often. Drives me nuts. Every color had a reason, as radios sucked in those days, radar an experiment, so the mark one eyeball ruled. 18 planes to a squadron, 3 to a division, thus 6 colors were used to ID each division. The tail colors designated one of the then 7 carriers. Very simple really and this during the depression when the military got zilch appropriations, so nothing was used if not necessary. A tad of subject, but his plane is just so neat.

I've got a book, "
The Official Monogram U.S. Navy & Marine Corps Aircraft Color Guide" Vol 1 1911-1939, by John M. Elliott Maj. USMC (Ret). On page 117 it has a large color artists rendition of an 18 plane squadron of F4B-4's showing all the planes as they would have been individually marked. It is a very interesting diagram to study, and really helps the understanding of how the colors and markings worked during the period. As Tommy demonstrated with his 'Wagon, just copying any of these pre-war schemes onto one of our models can easily result in a great looking airplane. They are relatively easy to do as well. I've wanted to build a Stuntwagon ever since I saw a picture of Tommy's, it just looks so "right" with that scheme on it.
If anyone is interested in this type of stuff I would highly recommend an Ebay search or something for this book. This one book is a virtual encyclopedia of info and is packed with lots of excellent photos and explanations of all the different markings up through 1939. It's even got color chips inside the rear cover. I got lucky and discovered my copy at a club swap meet for like 3 or 5 bucks, one of the best "scores" I've ever ended up with.
Does anyone have photos of Tommy's plane they could put up here? Once the fuel tank space issue gets solved by our "Skunkworks" kit supporters, we might just be seeing a great new kit of the Stuntwagon at some point in the near future. My name is on the list.
