JDK wrote:warbird1 wrote:They even incorporate parts of original 190's on them.
Really? Such as? My understanding was that this is not the case.
The Flug Werk website (English version) had the list of items on the airplane which were original. I don't remember all of them, but I distinctly remember reading that Flug Werk acquired a cache of something like 12 to 16 original 190 tailwheels which were going to be incorporated into the replicas. I've tried to find the reference on the Flug Werk website to it, but: 1) it seems they took down the English version of it, 2) the website has been revamped and they deleted nearly all of the background reference material on the new build 190's. Even with the help of the Babelfish translator, I couldn't find any references to it. But, I am absolutely 100% positive I read that, because I thought it was unusual that they were going to use original parts, so it stuck in my mind. It is possible, however, that maybe that original plan was not executed and they did NOT use original tailwheels. Either case, I would like to know the truth and I'm willing to be corrected if somebody can provide definitive information on that.
From wikipedia, here is a link which confirms what I saw:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fw_190"Some of these new Fw 190s are known to be fitted with the original tail wheel units from the Second World War; a small cache of tail gear having been discovered."
JDK wrote:IIRC, Chuck posted that a genuine Fw-190 rebuild ordered some Flug Werke parts - which did not fit / were not compatible with the restoration of the real thing.
Perhaps so, but that is not surprising on account of several factors:
1) Later in the war, the standardization of parts and tolerances became less strict as the Germans became more desperate to build fighters under the rigors of Allied bombing attacks while building planes in caves, underground, in forests, etc., in appalling conditions. Added to this, a lot of the late war aircraft were built by slave labor from Jews and non-Aryan prisoners. A lot of the German war machine was intentionally built sloppy or outright sabotaged in efforts to impede them.
2) If the recent "authentic" 190 rebuilds were relying on blueprints, then we know that sometimes aircraft parts are not always built strictly according to the blueprints. This was a common practice back then in the 30's and 40's for many countries - Germany and U.S. included. There are variations between completed assembly line aircraft and the "perfect, in-tolerance" blueprint built versions.
3) The Flug Werk aircraft, according to the company, was never intended to be a "100% accurate" aircraft. It was started, designed, and built all along as a "replica". On the official Flug Werk website it was stated that it was intended to be approximately "95% accurate". So, not every part will be interchangeable with real 190 parts.
4) The Fw 190 was produced in numbers over 20,000 with something like 100 different variants. Unless that particular restoration was the EXACT same variant then it's no surprise that some of the parts didn't fit. Does a "generic" Spitfire part fit on every Spitfire? No, of course not. Here is a link to all of the variants of the wartime 190 built:
http://fw190.hobbyvista.com/variants.htm