Julie wrote:
Hello,
I just wanted to get feedback on a few items regarding the star. Please understand that I'm not trying to throw a wrench into the system. I just want to share my thoughts and get your feedback.
I really like the star, but every time I look at it, something just doesn't seem right. For instance, why would anybody take time to remove all the rivets on a damaged airplane part? I don't think I've ever seen this before. In addition, wouldn't it have been easier to leave it "as is." Or, wouldn't it have been pretty difficult to remove all the rivets from a damaged aircraft since some of the rivets would have been tweaked? If nothing else, it seems like an odd practice.
No. If the airplane was being repaired, drilling out all of the rivets would be the first step. The intent being to remove the skin, exposing the structure underneath without doing any additional damage. The job probably would have been given to the junior guy in the hangar for rivet drilling practice. That being a handy skill to have<G>
Julie wrote:
I wanted to insert an image, but I can't seem to do it, so here goes a description. The lines of the star seem very crisp and well defined. The blue circle doesn't look as defined. Why do you think this is? For instance, look at the bottom right side of the circle, is that a bad paint job? Or a bad camera angle? It's just not a crisp circle.
The circle may have been painted with a stencil. For example, the RAF used doped cloth stencils to lay out their roundels. Laying out the star is relatively easy using masking tape. The stencil may leave a blurred line, and the tape a sharper one. From my painting days I would do the white first and mask off the star, but most of the wartime photos I've seen show it in the other order - go figure.
Julie wrote:
In addition, why are their marks that looks like somebody took a grinder to it? If you look at the upper left of the star, it looks like rivets were removed with a grinder? These marks don't look like marks from a crash. What do you think caused them?
Probably a grinder. Perhaps a few mis-drilled or bent rivets were all that was holding the panel on. Easy enough to grind the head off, or out, to free it up.
Julie wrote:
I look forward to your feedback.