Cleaning and painting the Snoopy?s Continental A 65 engineTiistai 2.12.2025 Ressu, i.e. Snoopy (OH-XEA) was originally equipped with a Continental A 65 engine. However, the original engine has not survived. Nevertheless, we managed to obtain a similar type of engine, from a crashed aircraft, to install in the Snoopy. Although this engine is damaged and unfit for use, it suits our purposes. We are restoring the engine to look like an operational one and supplementing it with missing parts so that it can be mounted on Snoopy’s nose.
All parts still attached to the engine, except for the cylinders, were disassembled. We were unable to detach the cylinders as the pistons were completely seized inside them. The detached parts were cleaned using various methods, including the engine block and its cylinders. For the cylinders, we decided that to paint them properly, including the cooling fins, they would have to be thoroughly cleaned before painting. Therefore, we opted to take the Continental engine block, with the cylinders still attached, for glass bead blasting at Taximo Oy in Tattarisuo, Helsinki.
Photo: Juha Veijalainen
Before sending the engine to be glass bead blasted, it was plugged up to prevent the blasting media from getting inside the engine, even though this engine will never run again. The open intake and exhaust ports were covered with thin aluminium plates. A similar protective cover was made from thin aluminium for the opening left by the removed timing gear cover, to stop blasting material from entering. This was done by placing the removed timing cover on a sheet of aluminium, tracing its shape, and cutting out a piece to match, with holes drilled in the edges for fixing pins.
We mounted the Continental engine onto an engine stand so that it could be rotated easily, much like a spit roast. To install the timing gear cover, the engine had to be removed from the stand. This was done with an engine hoist. Once the protective cover was attached, the engine was returned to its stand. It was deliberately taken for blasting while still mounted, as this made it much easier to rotate during the cleaning process. Our Continental A 65 engine was now ready for glass bead blasting.
Photo: Reijo Siirtola The engine was transported from Puusepäntie to Tattarisuo in a passenger car, where the engine and its stand could be loaded, pulling it in with a cargo strap. A week later, the engine was collected from blasting and, still on the stand, was taken to the Finnish Aviation Museum for painting the cylinders. This was because the museum has a spray-painting tent, which we don’t have at the Puusepäntie workshop. Black and white photographs of the Snoopy show that the engine’s cylinders and valve covers were painted black, while the block was left in aluminium. We followed this original approach as well.
Photo: Juha Veijalainen
Photo: Reijo Siirtola Before painting the cylinders, the block was protected with plastic. The cylinders to be painted were brushed and washed with Sinol to remove any dust left from the blasting. The spark plugs were then removed, and the edges of the plug holes were greased with Vaseline, as they were to be left unpainted. The engine was then taken to the painting tent in the museum’s yard. The cylinders were spray-painted with semi-gloss black Isoguard Pansar paint. Surprisingly, a large amount of paint was required, as the cylinders and their cooling fins had a lot of surface area to cover. The cylinders and cooling fins were painted twice to ensure the spaces between the fins were thoroughly coated.
Photos: Reijo Siirtola
After painting, the Continental engine was transported by car back to the workshop in Puusepäntie. There, the engine block was wiped down with Sinol, after which a clear Isotrol varnish was brushed onto the block’s surface to protect the aluminium from oxidation. Now the Snoopy’s Continental A 65 engine block and cylinders were cleaned and painted. The transformation from the engine’s original condition was remarkable. Photos: Lassi Karivalo, unless otherwise mentioned Translation to English: Erja Reinikainen |
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Avainsanat: aviation history, restoration, Tuesday Club, Hietanen HEA-23b, OH-XEA, Ressu |

















