Wow.....just, wow.
Thanks for posting that link, Chris. I've been hearing tales of Mr. Deimert and "The Defender" documentary ever since joining WIX. Now I know what you all have been talking about. The film was so "serious" in tone, I'm still trying to figure out if it was deliberately tounge-in-cheek or not. I'm gonna have to show it to my brother..he's a shadetree mechanic who would love Deimert's ingenious..er.."engineering." Am I the only one who thinks Chris Ball bears a striking resemblance to Red's nephew Harold?
I love how the film narrator mention's Deimert restoring wrecked Japanese aircraft back to "perfect flying condition." I remember when I first saw a pic of the Deimert Val in a magazine back in the late '70s. Even to a teenage model builder like myself with no real knowledge of aircraft construction, it looked like a kludged-together mess (with an obviously poorly-grafted on Harvard tail.) I've seen the NMNA Zero up close, and to think that it actually flew is scary. The wing is obviously built up around a BT-13 wing, with pop-riveted sheet metal to give it a Zero-ish shape (when I saw it, there was a BT-13/SNV hanging nearby, and the pattern of inspection panels and wing structure on the underside were identical.) There are large bulges above the forward wing root..someone here said they were fairings for the landing gear retraction ropes, and I'm not entirely sure they were kidding!
During his lecture to the High School class, Diemert mentions how the Zero was cut apart with axes when recovered. Back in the early '80s, there was a Zero aft fuselage on display at the NMUSAF that had obviously been hacked apart and crudely spliced back together. Could this have been one of the Deimert recoveries?
SN