Refurbishment of the Hansa and Moth modelsPerjantai 24.1.2025 - Tuesday Club member The Karelian Aviation Museum in Lappeenranta, has in its collection wooden models of the I.V.L A. 22 “Hansa” 4F35 (later IL-35) and de Havilland D.H.60 (MO-97) aircraft. Both types of aircraft were licence built at the Aircraft Factory of The Aviation Force (Later the Air Force) in Suomenlinna. The I.V.L. A.22 aircraft were built on the licence from Hansa Brandenburg W.33 aircraft. Many modifications were made in the aircraft built in Suomenlinna so that the aircraft didn’t fully match the original anymore. However, it has always been simply the Hansa in common language, as in this blog, too. The Hansas served as maritime reconnaissance aircraft in the Finnish Air Force, and the Moth as a trainer and a liaison aircraft. The Hansas were struck off charge in mid 1930s and the Moths after the Continuation War. Because the wooden models of both the aircraft were in poor condition, the Karelian Aviation Museum queried of the Tuesday Club, whether they could repair and refurbish the models. We were pleased to meet the challenge, because we had earlier on restored for them the tail boom stabilizers of the Mil Mi-8T helicopter and the wings of the Link Trainer. On top of that we have, in our Club, an excellent model builder, who took on the job. In refurbishing both the models we adhered to the principle of fixing or completing what’s broken but otherwise followed the principles of preservative conservation. The aim is to preserve originality, where the models wouldn’t be repainted, but the original paint surfaces will be maintained with preservation. We will respect the original modellers and earlier restorers by leaving as much of the original patina visible as possible, however, avoiding the models looking ragged. First we took on the Hansa. The Hansa’s swastika emblems drew our attention. They were of paper and had been glued to the wings and fuselage. We decided to remove the ragged paper emblems. They were soaked with water and removed with a painter’s spatula, and under them painted emblems emerged. This left us thinking, why new emblems made of paper had been glued on. Perhaps the previous restorer had thought that the old ones were worn out and glued new ones out of paper on them. The painted emblems, discovered under layers of paper, were in surprisingly good condition. They were patch-painted only to an extent that they wouldn’t jump out as too fine, compared to the patinated appearance of the rest of the aircraft. A quaint detail was that one of the fuselage swastika emblems was a mirror image. We decided to preserve it as it was. It’s common knowledge that so called reversed swastikas had in fact appeared in the surfaces of Finnish Air Force aircraft. Might this have been the case in the 4F35 individual, the example aircraft to this model? The Hansa model’s engine cowling was rusted. It was meticulously sanded clean. Then the cowling was bordered with narrow masking tape and painted with silver enamel paint. The radiator cells at the front end of the engine were painted dark and the exhaust tubes penetrating the cowling were painted black. The stepping boards at the junction of the wings and fuselage were loose. They were properly fastened and painted silver. The paint on the wooden surfaces, especially on the upper surfaces, was scaling off. The scaling paint was removed with the masking tape/sticker method, where the loose scales remain on the tape, but the solid paint surface stays untouched. After the tape treatment the surfaces were lightly sanded with fine sanding paper. Finally the surfaces were lacquered with matt acrylic lacquer. It suits this purpose well, because the lacquer won’t change the appearance of the original patinated paint surface but gives it good protection. Both the pilot’s and observer’s “offices” were tidied by painting them with brown acrylic paint. The painting was brought to the upper rims to emulate the leather paddings. The model’s propeller was made to resemble a laminated wooden propeller. It was sanded and lacquered with semi matt lacquer. Brass reinforcements were painted to the leading edges of the propellers. Finally, the swastikas that were used in the State Aircraft propellers, were transferred as decals on the propeller blades. The refurbishment of the Hansa was now completed, and it was time for the Moth. The wooden Moth MO-97 model was refurbished like the Hansa complying the principles of repairing conservation. The Moth had suffered worse than the Hansa with the passing of time. The coupling of the fuselage and the upper and lower wings had failed. The threads emulating the wing stiffeners, or lamellas, were broken off. The Moth’s paper swastika emblems had dried up all crumpled and were unusable. First, the Moth was dismantled, and the refurbishing was started with the swastika emblems. The wings’ paper emblems were removed by soaking and the swastikas that were painted on the wooden surface, were cleaned with a magic sponge. After that the swastikas that appeared from under them, were carefully completed with blue and white paint. The wing emblems were restored to reasonably good condition in this way. The fuselage emblems were in such sorry state that they were replaced with decal swastikas. Otherwise the fuselage and wing surfaces had kept well, so they were just cleaned and given a protective layer of matt acryl lacquer. Rigging the Moth was started by joining the lower wings and the fuselage. The coupling of the lower wings and the fuselage were made sturdy by installing metal reinforcements. The struts joining the lower and upper wings were fastened on the lower wings. The middle section of the upper wing, where the fuel tank was situated, was mounted on the fuselage. The upper wings could be joined to the middle wing using their original brackets. The stiffening threads emulating the struts and lamellas in the Moth model wings had to be replaced with new threads. As thread, twined cotton thread of thickness two was used. The darker, thinner thread was used as wing stiffeners and thicker light thread to reinforce the struts. Attaching the threads was started by drilling holes for them into both the upper and lower wings with a Dremel Mini extremely thin bit. The threads were squeezed through the drilled holes with a needle threader used by dressmakers. When the end of the thread was passed into its hole, a drop of superglue was applied. When the glue had dried, the other end was passed into the opposite hole (e.g. from the stem of the lower wing to the upper end of the strut). The thread was tightened suitably in its hole and superglue was applied into the hole, keeping the thread tight at the same time. The criterion for the suitable tightness is that when you look from the front, the lower and upper wings stay at the right angle compared to the fuselage. After the glue had dried, we made certain that the thread stayed tight, and we moved on to the next reinforcement thread. Working like this, all the four pairs of reinforcement threads were glued into place. In fitting the reinforcement threads we had to be careful that the reinforcement threads were at the same tightness on both sides of the fuselage. Otherwise, the lower and upper wings won’t set at the right angle, or one individual tread is left too loose. When the reinforcement treads between the lower and upper wings were in place, grids of reinforcement tread were attached to the struts between the lower and upper wings. They were made of the thicker twined cotton thread. The missing long exhaust tube on the left-hand side of the fuselage was built to the completed model Moth. The exhaust tube was made to look original. It was made from plastic 1:48 aircraft black model sprue, from which a piece as long as the exhaust tube was cut. The piece was heated, and the softened plastic was bent to form. At the end of the exhaust tube an aperture was drilled. The front end of the exhaust tube was glued with superglue to the existing hole in the cylinder block. The middle part was fastened with a metal clip. The tube was painted with black acryl colour so that the front end shows a silver hue due to engine heating. When the Moth’s wooden propeller had been lacquered, small swastika decals were attached to the propeller blades. Now the MO-95 wooden model repair and conservation was ready. Both the wooden models of the 1930s aircraft, the Hansa and the Moth, are owned by the Karelian Aviation Museum. The repaired models were now ready to be delivered to Lappeenranta to be put on display. Photos by Matti Kainulainen. Translation to English by Matti Liuskallio. |
Avainsanat: aviation history, restoration, Tuesday Club, Scale models |