Wed Jan 22, 2025 2:11 pm
Michael J. Neufeld wrote:Since we had no information as to what German paint might originally have been on the components, Chris Reddersen advocated a mismatched camouflage scheme, as is seen in some historic photos. Since the major fuselage and engine sections were often made by different manufacturers and only put together during final assembly, the Luftwaffe green and sky-blue patterns sometimes did not match up at the join lines. I was fine with this idea, as was my successor as curator of early rockets and missiles, Colleen Anderson. After painting the components in a dark red primer, he applied the blue all over the missile, as was German practice, and then added the dark green patterns on top.
Michael J. Neufeld wrote:They also removed a lot of body filler applied in 1976 to disguise the dings and dents in the fuselage. I decided that only the largest of the holes would be refilled, both to keep out dust and to improve its appearance. But the many remaining imperfections preserve the reality of an artifact that was dimpled by spot welding during manufacturing, but also roughly handled after capture by the United States. The perennial question of Museum visitors, "Why does it look so dented?", will return in force after the rocket is reinstalled.
Wed Jan 22, 2025 6:25 pm
Thu Jan 23, 2025 8:10 am
Thu Jan 23, 2025 8:49 am
Thu Jan 23, 2025 11:54 am
Fri Jan 24, 2025 1:01 pm
Ken wrote:I do think that there should be some mention of this if a museum chooses to recreate the error.
JohnB wrote:After volunteering at a museum for four years and interacting daily with the "average" visitor who is not a history or aviation buff, I'd suggest moderation in making items look bad/worn/distressed.
JohnB wrote:I'd rather have them leaving with the (incorrect) impression that all warbirds were spotless, than with the idea that the aircraft were poorly built ("Why does it have dents?") or maintained.
Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:28 pm
Sun Jan 26, 2025 4:22 am
Sun Jan 26, 2025 10:31 am
Spitty wrote:See an original WW2 issue early BOB MkI Spitfire and you would have a heart attack with its build quality...
Sun Jan 26, 2025 11:25 pm
JohnB wrote:they pretty much hand built...where the concept of interchangeable parts was more of a theory than reality?
Mon Jan 27, 2025 3:56 am
JohnB wrote:Spitty wrote:See an original WW2 issue early BOB MkI Spitfire and you would have a heart attack with its build quality...
I would be interested in seeing that.
I guess we'll need a tall ladder in Chicago.
So, was the workmanship sloppy (perhaps because of a production learning curve as opposed to carelessness, remember before the Spitfire, Supermarine was hardly in the business of mass production) or were they pretty much hand built...where the concept of interchangeable parts was more of a theory than reality?
Mon Jan 27, 2025 9:07 pm
JohnB wrote:Spitty wrote:See an original WW2 issue early BOB MkI Spitfire and you would have a heart attack with its build quality...
I would be interested in seeing that.
I guess we'll need a tall ladder in Chicago.
So, was the workmanship sloppy (perhaps because of a production learning curve as opposed to carelessness, remember before the Spitfire, Supermarine was hardly in the business of mass production) or were they pretty much hand built...where the concept of interchangeable parts was more of a theory than reality?
Tue Jan 28, 2025 5:24 am
Sun Feb 02, 2025 2:41 pm
Sun Feb 02, 2025 5:07 pm