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Valkyrie Junkers planes

Fri Jul 10, 2009 8:10 pm

I just saw Valkyrie last night and was impressed with
the film overall, even though there was mainly only
very fleeting glances at anything aeronautical.

The Junkers 52 aircraft were on screen for some
key scenes and in the audio commentary Tom
Cruise said he flew one around.

Where did the two Junkers aircraft come from
and were they original Junkers or CASA ones?

Fri Jul 10, 2009 9:48 pm

I find it interesting to the disposition of currently surviving JU-52's...


One over here. (USA)

The rest over there. (Europe) :)

Fri Jul 10, 2009 10:15 pm

There's only one Junkers Ju 52 - in the Western Canada Aviation Museum. The three engine beasties (which WCAM's was converted from) are all Junkers Ju 52/3m models - /3m for tri-motor.

Off the cuff, I don't recall which Junkers was used in the Cruise movie, but the Swiss are still operating their three German built examples, IIRC, there's a German built flyer at La Ferte Alais in France, plus another in Germany (not sure of the origin without checking) and the Lufthansa example 'D-AQUI' which is again an ex German example, known in the US for many years in Cadin's hands as 'Iron Annie'. I think the South African Airways example is also currently airworthy.

There are numerous others preserved, many ex- French 'Toucans' and Spanish CASA examples.

Sat Jul 11, 2009 9:08 am

I believe the Western Canadian Aviation Museum Ju.52 is actually a three-engine that was rebuilt maybe 20 years ago to the single engine configuration. So not an original Ju.52, if I am correct. Can anyone confirm that?

And if that is correct, does that make the Ju.52 a reproduction? What is the right term for an aircraft, not original but adapted from an old and original craft of another type?

Sat Jul 11, 2009 9:48 am

old iron wrote:I believe the Western Canadian Aviation Museum Ju.52 is actually a three-engine that was rebuilt maybe 20 years ago to the single engine configuration. So not an original Ju.52, if I am correct. Can anyone confirm that?

Yes, it was converted (as JDK already said) to represent the famous CF-ARM, which was scrapped in 1947.
JDK wrote: The three engine beasties (which WCAM's was converted from)...


old iron wrote:And if that is correct, does that make the Ju.52 a reproduction? What is the right term for an aircraft, not original but adapted from an old and original craft of another type?

Perhaps we'll call it 'backdated'?

:partyman:

Sat Jul 11, 2009 10:02 am

As rcaf100's said, the WCAM machine isn't an original Ju 52, but a reverse engineered 'backdated' effort - a major effort, and I understand well done.

Technical term? There's no agreed definition for this that I'm aware of - backdated is fun, modified original a fair assessment; the critical point is WCAM don't claim it's anything it isn't...

Still no idea as to the Junkers Ju 52/3ms used.

Sat Jul 11, 2009 11:33 am

Maybe the right way to honestly state the origins of a non-original display item such as the Ju.52 would be to add "rebuilt from" as in

Ju.52 (rebuilt from Ju.52/3m)
.

Sat Jul 11, 2009 4:08 pm

For filming, they used two of the three still flying Swiss Ju 52. These are painted with washable paint into the film colours. Today are the following eight Ju 52 / Casa 352 still in flying condition:

HB-HOP, based in Switzerland, JU Air
HB-HOT, based in Switzerland, JU Air
HB-HOS, based in Switzerland, JU Air
HB-HOY, based in Germany, JU Air
D-CDLH (D-AQUI), based in Germany, Lufthansa Historic Flight
ZS-AFA, based in South Africa, South African Airways Historic Flight
N352JU, based in USA, Commemorative Air Force
F-AZJU, based in France, Amicale J. B. Salis

Image

Image

Sat Jul 11, 2009 9:30 pm

Thanks, M.P!

Sun Jul 12, 2009 3:15 pm

Look at that wax paint wash off!
Cheers M.P.

Sun Jul 12, 2009 8:54 pm

Simon Beck wrote:Look at that wax paint wash off!
Cheers M.P.


Very cool, i've often wondered about that.

Mon Jul 13, 2009 12:01 am

I think the WCAM backdated JU is actually a CASA version modified with the single RR Buzzard engine. When I was a curator at NEAM we traded our rare RR Buzzard for a sleeve valve Hercules.
Jerry

Mon Jul 13, 2009 9:24 am

Jerry O'Neill wrote:...we traded our rare RR Buzzard for a sleeve valve Hercules.
Jerry


Gee, I thought all C-130s had turbo-props! (*snort*)
:lol:

Rich
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