CH2Tdriver wrote:
So the question becomes is the fear of delamination really an issue? IS the fact that an airplane is flown regularly beneficial to one that's been kept in storage? Does an extra 10-12 years make a difference to a well maintained airplane?
First question after 'what care it had' would be 'what glue' - see above. My unqualified
impression is that the wood, provided the aircraft was cared for properly, wouldn't be a factor for some time further. However that, I guess depends on any deterioration due to use; Great War, W.W.II and modern high performance aircraft having exponentially greater stress and loads being applied to their structures. I'd like a qualified aero-engineer's view on that, but there are few aero engineers who actually know wood at this level of use; most don't, but that doesn't stop them giving out inaccurate data. (That's a journalist's job!)
(Mosquitoes were built from balsa, ply and spruce.)
Wood is (IMHO) consistently under estimated and dismissed as a high tech building material in the 21C due to engineering ignorance. It remains unique as a composite and remarkably adaptable material, the issue is current 'expert' understanding and education. It is notable wood has regained some ground in architectural use for higher status and load bearing structures.
Remember our oldest surviving aircraft, and oldest forms of transport are wooden; and the only older buildings than our wooden ones we have are mud or stone - neither recommended for aeronautical use.
Quote:
(JDK...thanks for the correction! I had RR on the brain. IIRC they owned a Spit XIV that was also tragically lost, and this is what I associated to.)
Indeed - Just to elaborate - Spitfire Mk.XIV RM689 G-ALGT (was painted as RM6
19 for a period) was used by Rolls Royce as a chase 'plane and then later for display flying, before being tragically lost with the pilot in a mismeasured looping manoeuvre at an airshow. RR then later bought a PR.19 / XIX PS853 / G-RRGN and currently display that, and also have the remains of G-ALGT under rebuild as I write.
HTH!