The Mosquito lifespan thing is very interesting, but here's a LOT of myths out there. I'll try and come back with some chapter & verse next week, when I've got my notes from a recent conversation with a Tech Curator restoring one.
Ironically the original Casien glue was better than the syntetic type they used later in the war, apparently, with certain provisos - like applying it properly, not letting it get wet or hot (tropical no-no) and stoping it being eaten, being organic, it was bug-tasty...
P51Mstg wrote:
Galvanic corrosion caused by dissimilar metals being put together caused Spits to rot over the years (which is why all the rivets get replaced) and the same thing on Japanese planes. So nobody expected them to last too long.
I understood it was just that magnesium rivets weren't expected to last 50 years. Certainly my understanding is the sheet metal might be OK metallurgically, but the rivets can just go to dust in your hand.
Quote:
One day my son asked why there weren't many P51Bs left? I explained, that by the time the B's got there, they were basically worn out. The same for most of the D's at the end of the war. When the Swedes got them, they were pretty much gone.
That's certainly part of the story, but being replaced by newer and 'better' machinery was also part of it. That's why there's relatively more 1945 service aircraft around than there is 1939 -41 stuff. The early/pre-war stuff had to avoid being used up, replaced or modified.