Sure does...on many liveries, but not one livery every called it an Argonaut
Technically it was a Canadair C4 but called a Canadair Four by Canadair who as a type designation referred to it as a CL-4...but that is all variations of a theme.
All DC4M-1 (RCAF) & DC4M-2 (TCA) were also called North Stars and were CL-2s and although as with BOAC the CPA aircraft were CL-4 they were Canadair C4-1....the lack of a CL-1 and a CL-3 makes me wonder if the prototype (C-54GM) and the TCA DC4M-2 were unofficially CL-1 and CL-3 respectively???
There was a CL-5, the one off Canadair C5 which used the engines and fin of a DC 6. The fuselage of the prototype and RCAF were DC4 and the C4 used a shortened DC 6 fuse with the rest of the basic airframe DC4
Oddly even though the TCA DC4M-2 looked like the C4 apart from a slightly different window variation it was the same length as the DC4M-1 (RCAF) unpressurised whereas the C4 was 1.3 inches longer

..no idea why
The only class name that can really be called a type was the Pionair which was a BEA mod that made them different to other DC 3's.
One as yet unnamed airliner had a class name allocated to it which was adopted by the manufacturer as it's genuine type name...anyone like to guess what that was??
Anyhow
I still think that was oil behind the petrol

...no matter what they called the aeroplane
