OK, part of the reason for WIXs existance is so we can discuss and learn about warbirds, yes?
In an effort to detach a couple of I hope interesting and useful discussions about paint and warbirds, I've just undertaken a mass of cutting and pasting to get the following together and out from the other threads where it seemed they might be getting hijacked. Phew.
For the record, I'm not 'hot' about any of this, I just don't like bull or disinformation. (but I'll certainly get hot if the thread disappears, after all this work!

) More importantly, the discussion has already thrown up many of the same old clichés, myths and some excellent points by various people.
As ever, I don't see this about camps or rights and wrongs, but getting to some understanding and conclusions. I'd certainly hope that we can keep it civil, and with luck, there should be some actually useful results from the discussion. With that ramble, let's lead off with a recap. [In last week's
Soap...]
In another thread (here:
http://warbirdinformationexchange.org/p ... hp?t=16191 ), Mike said:
Mike wrote:
The 2 P-47s were 'Hun Hunter' and 'Wicked Wabbit' - same squadron, same badge on the cowl, different names. Both stunning restorations, and they looked straight out of 1944-45', unlike many of the glossy, chromed, polished and generally pimped P-51s present ('Princess Elizabeth' and 'Twilight Tear' excepted) - sorry if I've offended any of the owners of any such P-51s, but that is my over-riding impression more than anything else of the whole weekend. Why go to all the trouble of restoring the aircraft down to the last stencil, decal and 50 cal bullet link, only to lose the whole 'look' of the 1944-45 period by shining the thing up like a Learjet?
FG1D Pilot wrote:
Mike wrote:
Why go to all the trouble of restoring the aircraft down to the last stencil, decal and 50 cal bullet link, only to lose the whole 'look' of the 1944-45 period by shining the thing up like a Learjet?
Because it stays that way forever. It's much easier to maintain. Flat paint basically has talcum powder in it. It soaks up everything and has to be repainted every year, at least, due to fading. You can't really get a good paint job unless you take it completly apart and strip it. An annual inspection could take 6 months to get it looking right again.
As a Korean painter once told me. "That ugry. Rich man no like ugry."
I added, in haste:
JDK wrote:
Cracking photos there...
FG1D Pilot wrote:
Mike wrote:
Why go to all the trouble of restoring the aircraft down to the last stencil, decal and 50 cal bullet link, only to lose the whole 'look' of the 1944-45 period by shining the thing up like a Learjet?
Because it stays that way forever. It's much easier to maintain. Flat paint basically has talcum powder in it. It soaks up everything and has to be repainted every year, at least, due to fading. You can't really get a good paint job unless you take it completly apart and strip it. An annual inspection could take 6 months to get it looking right again.
(With respect) Not true, as shown by numerous warbird schemes that are matt or semi-matt, and successful. IMHO, it's just an excuse for the 'gloss' or 'polished' guys. And having had Kermit Weeks (very nicely) ask me not to touch 'Ina' because of the fingerprints - who's got the work?
(Let's not even go near the polish instead of paint, or paint instead of metal on Mustangs.)
If you buy a Mustang and want an easy life...
FG1D Pilot wrote:
As a Korean painter once told me. "That ugry. Rich man no like ugry."
Now
that's true. Rich man like bling. Rich men like 'new looking'... Rich men certainly don't like their toys looking 'pre-loved' and second-hand from Uncle Sam.

CAPFlyer came back with:
CAPFlyer wrote:
I'm sorry, but I have to say something on this. I'm frustrated with the statements about how planes had a matte finish or that the metal didn't shine really high in the military. My Great Uncle, an Air Force pilot in WWII and Korea has an aircraft on display in Georgia and his best friend's airplane is on display at the NMUSAF. Both aircraft were restored in part using photos he took of the airplanes just after arriving in theater (i.e. brand new). Both aircraft had a very shiny finish - one a fully painted transport, one a metal fighter with painted stripes. Part of this reason is because it was painted with ENAMEL paint. Enamel paints only come in one finish - gloss. Any "matte" finishes are not pure enamels, they are hybrids. The reason so many pictures look flat is because of wear, not because that's how they were painted. Take a look at pictures of the CAF R4D-6 "Ready4Duty" back when she was originally painted back in the late 1980s. Then look at her now. She originally had a GLOSS finish because they used the exact same enamel paints that were used in the late 40s. That finish is now "matte" or "flat" because of weathering, not because that's the finish. The only reason they got dull was because they didn't have any clear coating to protect that finish. There is nothing unauthentic about owners then using the same colors and paints that originally adorned their aircraft, even if they do maintain the finish to a level that wasn't always maintained in the field. Dull finishes didn't become the "norm" for military paint schemes until after Vietnam. Even the Skyraiders and Invaders had a glossy paint scheme. The only airplanes that were regularly painted with a "flat" finish were night fighters.
And:
CAPFlyer wrote:
JDK wrote:
And having had Kermit Weeks (very nicely) ask me not to touch 'Ina' because of the fingerprints - who's got the work?
Oh, so the fact that human oils corrode [metal] and stain most paints doesn't have anything to do with trying to maintain a complete finish on the aircraft?
Sorry, but the reason they ask you not to touch the paint due to fingerprints is true. Try looking at a plane that's had hands all over it and see where the paint is much more worn where the hands have been than where they haven't. It's mostly due to the oils on them than anything else. It's true of flat and gloss finishes, that's why it's not advisable to touch ANY paint with an unprotected hand.
I frankly don't blame them. When you're dishing out $60K for a paint job (or more), I think it's perfectly reasonable to protect that investment.
We then had:
slinky wrote:
The biggest reason Kermit said that is not because of the paint....It's because there is no paint to speak of except the trim. Ina is polished metal and anyone that has ever spent time polishing out aluminum can tell you that it starts oxidizing fast from fingerprints anf water spots. The only thing I polish on my plane is the spinner but it takes about 30 minutes a month. I'd hate to think what Ina takes to keep her looking as good as she does.
With Mike's response:
Mike wrote:
Yes, but they're flyable aeroplanes, not priceless Renaissance paintings.
They fly through the air at several hundred miles an hour, sometimes through rain, have hot, noxious exhaust gasses pass over the skin, fuel, oil, hydraulic fluid and coolant spilled on them, people walking on them and dust blown onto them on airport ramps.
I found this notice, stuck all over 'Quick Silver' at GML, to be a very refreshing change.........

(A great idea, and let's just leave aside the question encouraging the public to touch a live prop...)
OK, onto the discussion. I'll try to respond to some of the points, and as ever, let's see where we go.