Yep, & he caught us on the way home this afternoon, too. In fact, he's probably back at the barn, or real close, as I write this. A friend of mine was in here today & he used to be active in the CAF & we talked about it & basically told be the same thing about LTV restoring it after the bad wreck, etc. & we were wondering if that's when they were metalized or what. It's been about 25 years since a Corsair graced my ramp, (AFAIR, the last one prior had been Merle G's "Angel".) Thanks for satisfying my curiosity.
When our pilot, said "that is the way it was made" (quote), take that as "that is the way it was restored". I assume you caught him at an FBO enroute to Opelika, AL., where he is attending a Fly-In with the CAF Corsair, March 10.
The original FG-1D had fabric covered elevators, rudder and ailerons. The outer wings were metal forward of the spar, but featured fabric-covered plywood to the trailing edges. The flaps were skinned with sheet metal. When Vought undertook the restoration of the CAF FG-1D in 1980 - 1981, the scarcity of personnel with fabric experience made replacement of the outer wing panels a special problem, so a decision was made to re-skin those surfaces with .025 2024 T-3 Alclad using the rivet pattern complying with USAF T.O 1-1A-1 and ANO1-45HA-3. The wing panels now conformed to the standard of the later production F4U-5 model after WWII, and U.S. Navy Type Improvement Modifications.
As Rob correctly stated, the CAF Corsair, although an FG-1D, is displayed as Merritt O. Chance's F4U-1D.
The wings on this aircraft are not -5's. The dataplates in the wing fold area confirm this.
Regards
Tracey
CAF Corsair Sponsor Group
http://www.caf-corsair.com