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I have been provided with an email from someone who has viewed the forum but is not a member to make his own postings.
that email makes the following "quoted" points in regards to the wreck being a Ki-51 Sonia, with my own comments inserted afterwards.
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1. The wreck's gunring is one piece, while the Kates has a two piece gunring that can move 180 deg. (the Sonia could only move 45 deg)
While I cant comment or refute the issue of the gunring being two piece in the Kate versus one piece in the Sonia, and I am unsure of the source of this technical reference? the wreck's gunring is obviously a single fixed ring, but with a gun trolley that can travel from one side to another and deliver an arch of @ 80 degrees horitzontally, and it would seem the gun pivoted from the top of the trolley so its vertical travel or arc is unrelated to the gunring design itself - I am therefore unable I am unable to correlate the wreck to either the Sonia or Kate gunring installation as described above or confirm the accuracy of the interpretation?
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2. The Sonia has a much more flat windscreen than the Kate.
The Sonia as shown in the Indonesian museum has a very "sharp" angled wingscreen frame? the two large side angled panels sweep sharply forward from the moving canopy section, to join a narrow "flat" wingscreen.
Of interest is that the two side angled panels on the Sonia appear to have slightly concave (curving up) frame joins to the fuselage.
The Kate has a rounded front windscreen (as per photo in my first post) and small side angled panels with either straight or convex (curving down) frame joins to the fuselage.
The Wreck has rivet/screw line seemly representing the windscreen assembly? seem to be more consistant with the Kate "round" windscreen than the Sonia angular/flat windscreen at the front location?
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3. The cockpit length matchs that of a Sonia.
The Sonia is 9.21M or 30' 3" long
The Kate is 10.3M or 33' 10" long
ie there is a 1.1M or 3' 7" length difference in favour of the Kate
The Wreck is missing its engine mount, engine and cowl, and its rear fuselage and tail, ie it is only really a forward fuselage section from firewall back, I cannot see how its possible to determine the length of the remaining fuselage length from just the photo, let alone compare it to the equivalent Sonia or Kate section to make such a claim.
The Wreck seems to clearly have 3 cockpit/tub positions, and extends past the third which is fitted with the gun ring.This remains the most important identifiable difference, that the wreck seems to clearly have three cockpit cut-outs/tubs - consistent with the 3-D drawing, rather than two as expected and shown for the Sonia? and therefore is unexplainable as a Sonia?
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4. The center section on the outer panels on a Kate should have dive brake hinges these don't.
I understood the Kate was a Torpedo Bomber not a Dive Bomber so I wouldnt expect to find "Dive" Brakes on it in any case? (ie perforated as in SBD etc) but the Kate apparantly has full flaps (or speed flaps - ie top skin and bottom skin), where as the Sonia has a split trailing edge flap, ie only bottom skin.
If the wreck is a Sonia the centre-section trailing edge should extend level with the gun ring? its leading edge should be inline with the firewall.
if the wreck is a Kate the centre-section trailing edge should extend to @ 1/2 way through the third seat position. its leading edge should be set back behind the firewall
Unfortunately the Centre-Section remains on the YAP Wreck seem badly damaged and incomplete.
It seems the remaining structure on the port or LHS consists largely of the structure between the front and rear spar, it is difficult from the photos to confirm how much trailing edge remains intact? to resolve the flap configuration
It appears the front spar on the wreck is in line with the rollover truss or rear of the front cockpit? the 3-D drawings sourced suggests this is consistent with the Kate but not with the Sonia which shows the front spar in line with the back of the windscreen?
The rear spar of the wreck is in line with the end of the second? cockpit/tub this is also consistent with the Kate in the 3-D drawing but not with the Sonia which seems to be in line with the front of the rear cockpit?
However the pic #6 in "armyjunks" post below seems to clearly show the leading edge of the wing commencing some distance behind the firewall?, this is only consistent with the Kate.
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5. The front wing cord is too thick to be a Kate.
The Wreck's wing cord is difficult to ascertain in the photos but it does seem to rise up the fuselage side quite a height, that is consistant with the Kate, and with a wingspan of 15.52M or 50' 11" on the Kate as compared to 12.1M or 39' 8" I would expect the Kate to have a thicker wing cord than the smaller Sonia, this is suggested in the photos and 3-D drawings.
In regard to the YAP wreck being too thick to be a Kate, I think the reverse is true the wing is too thick to be a Sonia when compared with My earlier link of a Sonia Centre-section?
http://www.pacificwrecks.com/aircraft/ki-51/but/sonia-front-wide.html
Interestingly photo #7 shows a fully extended u/c leg with wheel and a second u/c leg lying on the ground with an apparant pivot casting and retract ram still in place?
This u/c leg wheel yoke is totally different to the curved/flat leg wheel yoke shown on an upturned Sonia Centre-section on page 13 of Charles Darby's book or the apparant fixed undercarriage mounting seen in the upright Sonia centre-section on the same page?
I remain more convinced this is a Kate forward cockpit wreck than ever before, most of the arguments put to me in email do not seem to be proven? or conclusive?
I dont think the one piece / two piece gunring is conclusive evidence at this time, I am unsure of the source of that technical reference, or the how to interpret that description, as the moveable gun trolley on the solid scarf ring may constitute two pieces in any case?
There are more matches of consistency between the wreck and a Kate, than a Sonia, and in particular the clear 3 place cockpit does not support identification as a Sonia?
Regards
Mark Pilkington