APG85 wrote:
The Zero was pieced together from numerous parts and wrecks. I think the volunteers did a pretty decent job with what they had....I don't know what they had to work with, what's real, what's fabricated and if they had any plans to work from. It would be interesting to see what they had when they started the rebuild/restoration. I also don't know how old the restoration is. What was done 20/30 years ago might be done to a different standard today.
The 'Zero' is one of 'colorful' Canadian Bob Deimert's 1970s creations, and is more of a replica than a restoration. It incorporates a some original Zero parts, combined with a lot of "Red Green Style" garage engineering (the wing center section appears to have been adapted from a BT-13.) I've heard that he also used a lot of non-aviation grade parts from the hardware store. I understand it actually flew once or twice before being donated to the museum. It was on display at the USMC Museum in Quantico for a number of years before ending up in Pensacola. What really bugs me is the fact that when I first visited the Museum in 2005 the 'Zero' had a reasonably accurate paint job. A couple of years later it was repainted in totally bogus markings that are all kinds of wrong.
SN