Corsair "Kathleen" Repaint (W/Options)

Bomber_12th

SOH-CM-2025
First off, while I do have some more 'flashy' navy blue Corsair repaints to make, I wanted to make a repaint of my favorite Corsair restoration first. Some of the following information comes from the November/December 2010 issue of Warbird Digest. This repaint is for the Aircraft Factory F4U-1A Corsair.


This repaint set depicts Goodyear FG-1D Corsair BuNo. 92489, from its debut at Oshkosh in 2010 following the completion of its award-winning restoration, and through its various slight changes in the years since (4 different options in all). This aircraft's survival is due to the efforts of Frank Arrufat, who purchased the aircraft from the Salvadorian AF in 1972. Frank, who was 32 at that point, was an ex-Navy pilot and an up-and-coming junior airline pilot working for TWA. An ad in Trade-A-Plane provided the news of the sale of surplus Corsairs in El Salvador, and Frank was able to hitch a ride on one of his company's aircraft to Ilopango Airport in San Salvador to ascertain what was available. After inspecting all of the Corsair airframes available, Frank decided on what was the least worse off and most complete of the Corsairs, FAS 209 (all of the Corsairs were incomplete, many lacking engines and with their outer wings detached). Frank drew up a laundry list of parts that his Corsair was missing and over the next two years he traveled back and forth to visit the airport, and through the help of personnel from the Salvadorian AF, worked on scavenging the needed parts from the other Corsairs on the field. In early 1974, with all of the needed parts found, the aircraft was finally disassembled and shipped to the U.S. - after the last of the payments, Frank had a complete Corsair project for $4,000. Due to being busy with work and starting a family, Frank wasn't able to get started on restoring the Corsair until 1983, basing the project at Fabens airstrip, an agricultural field, in El Paso, Texas. Over the next 17 years, Frank invested roughly 6,500 man-hours to restore the Corsair to airworthy. In 2000, Frank retired and began looking at the possibilities of fast-tracking the project to completion, and decided to send the project to John Lane's company, Airpower Unlimited in Jerome, Idaho (experts in authentic Corsair rebuilds) for completion. The plan that Frank had for the aircraft was followed through with precision - although a late-built FG-1D, Frank wanted the aircraft to resemble an F4U-1A or a very early F4U-1D Corsair, from the late-1943 to early-1944 period, a time when Corsairs were earning their keep, operating from crude land bases in the South Pacific. The feeling at the time was that there wasn't a Corsair flying that truly captured the essence of those early combat F4U's, and that restoring BuNo. 92489 in this fashion would set it apart. The transfiguration meant incorporating visual cues such as a tri-color camouflage paint scheme, an early style double-braced canopy, a slightly different antenna arrangement, amongst other detail alterations (including the fitting of an early factory-built Brewster center-line bomb rack). In 2009, with the Corsair on the verge of completion, Frank was faced with the hard fact that he was no longer able to justify spending more money on the project, and was willing to entertain offers from willing investors. Of a number of potential buyers, John O'Connor was the one to purchase the aircraft. Having fallen in love with the aircraft after having been introduced to the project in 2009, he set about having it completed just as Frank had intended, even including the name Kathleen on the nose, in honor of Frank's wife, and the registration number N209TW signifying FAS number 209 and Frank's previous employer, Trans World Airlines.

The plan from the moment John O'Connor purchased the aircraft was to have it completed in-time to debut at Oshkosh Airventure in 2010. Airpower Unlimited literally labored on the aircraft until the last moment to get the aircraft ready in time. With just enough flight testing conducted, John Lane headed to Oshkosh on the Monday of the show, but ran into a couple of engine problems upon nearing the first stop on the flight there. Waiting on a part, it wasn't until two days later that John Lane was able to make it into Oshkosh, late in the day, where Frank Arrufat and his wife Kathy were expectantly waiting as it rolled up in the warbird parking - when it showed up, it was a major surprise for those at the show and for those following the warbird forums at the time. Arriving just before the warbird judging was completed, the aircraft took home that year's World War Two Grand Champion award (amongst some stiff competition).

For the first version of this repaint, here is a depiction of what the aircraft looked like following completion of restoration by Airpower Unlimited and debuting at Oshkosh 2010. In this first stage, the aircraft was painted with the name "Kathleen" on the nose (Frank Arrufat's wife). It had "Jack O'Connor" painted along the canopy rail on the port-side (the aircraft's then owner). It had "Capt. "Slim" Lindbergh" and three Japanese flags painted along the canopy rail on the starboard side - this being to honor Charles Lindbergh and his involvement with Corsairs (and P-38's) in the Pacific - improving their endurance, and even tangling with the Japanese as a civilian pilot, with at least one confirmed 'kill' to his credit, having taken part in over 50 combat missions in the South Pacific. The aircraft's identifier number 489 comes from the last three digits of the actual airframe's BuNo. Although the markings are fictional, they are done in an absolute authentic manner, and the aircraft has one of the most authentic finishes of any warbird flying today. The tri-color paint scheme, for instance, was done based on original wartime guidelines for the era chosen. Where-as most all depictions of the tri-color scheme has intermediate blue on the lower surfaces of the outer wings, the original wartime guidelines that Airpower Unlimited sourced from the period of late-1943 and early-1944, they outlined that the lower surfaces of the outer wings were painted the same as the dark top-coat, non specular sea blue.

I really wanted to make sure the colors and tones were a very good/accurate match to the real aircraft, when seen in the sim, as compared to photographs of the real thing - this is something that can easily be way off (i.e., too much or too little saturation, too light or too dark from one color to the next, etc.). Also, just about every stencil is reproduced as per the real thing, and all of the white dots you see (as you do on the real thing) are inspection stamps, as applied at the factory. In this early stage, the propeller dome was clearly painted light grey, where as the rest of the propeller hub was bare metal.







 
Enter the "Texas Flying Legends" Museum

After the aircraft debuted at Oshkosh in late July/early August of 2010, the aircraft didn't remain in the possesion of John O'Connor for very long (his interest in owning a Bearcat would lead to the purchase of the former Lone Star Flight Museum example, painted in Blue Angels markings). The Corsair was sold in October of 2010, to the Bosarge family in Houston, Texas, who within the same week, also purchased two Mustangs and an original A6M2 Zero - this being a major coup at the time. First established as the "Fighter Hangar 1 Collection", it would be renamed as the "Texas Flying Legends" museum, based at Ellington Field, Houston, Texas. The museum has since continued to emass an ever greater and award-winng collection of warbirds, including a B-25, P-40K, FM-2, TBM, and a C-53/C-47. The museum currently has two Bearcats under restoration to airworthy at Ezell Aviation in Texas, and a P-51C, P-38L, and razorback P-47D under restoration to airworthy at Aircorps Aviation in Minnesota.

After the aircraft was sold to the "Texas Flying Legends" museum, the "Kathleen" and "Jack O'Connor" names were erased from the aircraft, though all of the other markings remain just as before. As part of "TFL", it is one of, if not the most travelled Corsairs in the world today, going to various air shows as well as traveling from Houston, TX, to Minot, ND, to Wiscasset, ME, and back again, each year, as part of the collections annual travels. To make light of just one of the other details that have changed in the time since it originally debuted in 2010, the propeller dome now appears to be dull silver, as opposed to painted grey as before.








 
Flight to St. Barths

In 2011, "TFL" flew four of their warbirds from Houston, TX to St. Barths (basing out of St. Maarten), to take part as an air show during/within the St. Barths Bucket Regatta boating event. This included the Corsair, P-40K, B-25, and one of the P-51's. A few videos of this epic trip and display around St. Barths can be found here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-nkrLxBiFr8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CcmE7QI1WZY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KcpRYMaB3fw

In order to fly over the international waters in that part of the world, much larger N-numbers were needed on the aircraft so that they could be sighted far more easily at distance. During their stay, the aircraft were based at Princess Juliana airport on St. Maarten, but all of the display flying was done over the port of St. Barths and over the St. Barths airport (which, if you don't have any scenery for, you can find an excellent freeware scenery of St. Barths at Avsim, with the filename st-barth_fsx.zip (be sure to read the readme file about autogen and coastal waves).

Just in-case you're a stickler for detail when wanting to recreate the flight or the displays, one of the included versions of the repaint will allow you to have the extra large temporary N-numbers.








 
For the Kids...

And finally, if you have any kids that are a fan of the Disney movie "Planes", or if you are in-fact one yourself, I thought at least someone might enjoy a depiction of how the aircraft has appeared this year at some events. The aircraft was featured in a photoshoot with the real-life recreated "Dusty Crophopper" Air Tractor earlier this year, as a Corsair is one of the feature characters from the movie. In the movie, the Corsair is a member of the wartime "Jolly Wrenches" squadron, a play on the real life VF-17 "Jolly Rogers". The movie's "Jolly Wrenches" logo was produced as a decal and applied to both sides of the nose on the aircraft, and so-far the decals have yet to be removed.




 
She's stunning!

Thank you Brian! Its been almost four years now since I've been wanting a repaint of this aircraft for the AF Corsair, so it feels great to finally have it made. I gotta say, there was a lot of trial and error before I got the results that I wanted (or at least close enough) with the tri-color scheme tones and level of shine (sort of an "egg-shell finish", as per the real thing).


I should also add that I corrected the product's bump map for the tail/rear fuselage. As it comes, the bump map for the starboard-side vertical fin and rudder is up-side down (likely a left-over from earlier mapping). This is now corrected and will be included with the repaint, and when installed, it will fix this issue for all of the paint schemes (default and addon).
 
I love the video's of the Warbirds diving down the St. Barth's runway. The P-40 is rock steady.

I should also add that I'm looking forward to the repaints. Thanks John.
 
Any chance we could talk you into a couple more....these two from Chino?

http://www.vg-photo.com/airshow/chino2007/f4u.html

DSC_0331.jpg


DSC_0342.jpg
 
Thanks guys, I appreciate it! Its been uploaded this morning. Hopefully the installation instructions are written clear enough - you can either select to have just one option installed, or up to all four at one time, depending on what you want.

Even though the real aircraft retains the F4U-1D/FG-1D dual drop tank/payload hardpoints, it was restored/displayed with a center-line mounted Brewster bomb rack as well (fitted with a depth-charge), which uses the same mounting setup as the early Corsair center-line drop tank as seen on the AF F4U-1A model (which this repaint uses, for the double braced canopy which the restoration also features). Although the real aircraft hasn't had one of those early center-line drop tanks fitted, it could, and I made sure to add some detailing to the center-line drop tank textures just in-case anyone wants to fly the model with it fitted - this included copying an oil leak stain, from a photo of the depth-charge mounted underneath the real aircraft, onto the drop tank textures, in the same spot and to the angle you would expect the leak to follow as the aircraft is sitting on the ground.
 
John, I definitely have had that all specular sea blue example in mind. That one set the benchmark for all of the Corsair restorations that have followed. That one, like "Kathleen" and the "Olympic Flight Museum" Corsairs that I have already made repaints of, was restored by Airpower Unlimited as well - having preceded "Kathleen" and the "Olympic Flight Museum's" example. I'll save discussing the details on that aircraft until I have it made. ; ) What I want to do, like I've done with "Kathleen", is make a repaint as it looked then, in factory U.S. Navy markings, when it debuted at Oshkosh in 2003 when owned by Gary Kohs, but then also as it appears today, now owned by Vintage Wings of Canada, with Robert Hampton Gray markings applied over the restorations original paint. (It's a crime they're still available at Flightsim.com, but one of the very first repaints I ever made was of that same aircraft, in 2004, for the "Gramps" FDGV2 Corsair, the real aircraft having become a favorite of mine the moment I first saw it. I did the same repaint again, in 2007, for the Aeroplane Heaven Corsairs.)

It would also be great to reproduce the Planes of Fame F4U-1A as well, which is seen in the other photo. That happens to be the oldest Corsair flying today, and was originally fitted with the typical F4U-1A double-braced canopy. Its been reported over the years that Planes of Fame has an original double-braced canopy for it, but they've never gotten around to restoring it and swapping it out with the later canopy that it is currently fitted with.
 
John, I definitely have had that all specular sea blue example in mind. That one set the benchmark for all of the Corsair restorations that have followed. That one, like "Kathleen" and the "Olympic Flight Museum" Corsairs that I have already made repaints of, was restored by Airpower Unlimited as well - having preceded "Kathleen" and the "Olympic Flight Museum's" example. I'll save discussing the details on that aircraft until I have it made. ; ) What I want to do, like I've done with "Kathleen", is make a repaint as it looked then, in factory U.S. Navy markings, when it debuted at Oshkosh in 2003 when owned by Gary Kohs, but then also as it appears today, now owned by Vintage Wings of Canada, with Robert Hampton Gray markings applied over the restorations original paint. (It's a crime they're still available at Flightsim.com, but one of the very first repaints I ever made was of that same aircraft, in 2004, for the "Gramps" FDGV2 Corsair, the real aircraft having become a favorite of mine the moment I first saw it. I did the same repaint again, in 2007, for the Aeroplane Heaven Corsairs.)

It would also be great to reproduce the Planes of Fame F4U-1A as well, which is seen in the other photo. That happens to be the oldest Corsair flying today, and was originally fitted with the typical F4U-1A double-braced canopy. Its been reported over the years that Planes of Fame has an original double-braced canopy for it, but they've never gotten around to restoring it and swapping it out with the later canopy that it is currently fitted with.


Yep and the one you did for the AH Corsair was one of my fav's in FS2004 days. Looking forward to these!
 
John, I definitely have had that all specular sea blue example in mind. That one set the benchmark for all of the Corsair restorations that have followed. That one, like "Kathleen" and the "Olympic Flight Museum" Corsairs that I have already made repaints of, was restored by Airpower Unlimited as well - having preceded "Kathleen" and the "Olympic Flight Museum's" example. I'll save discussing the details on that aircraft until I have it made. ; ) What I want to do, like I've done with "Kathleen", is make a repaint as it looked then, in factory U.S. Navy markings, when it debuted at Oshkosh in 2003 when owned by Gary Kohs, but then also as it appears today, now owned by Vintage Wings of Canada, with Robert Hampton Gray markings applied over the restorations original paint. (It's a crime they're still available at Flightsim.com, but one of the very first repaints I ever made was of that same aircraft, in 2004, for the "Gramps" FDGV2 Corsair, the real aircraft having become a favorite of mine the moment I first saw it. I did the same repaint again, in 2007, for the Aeroplane Heaven Corsairs.) It would also be great to reproduce the Planes of Fame F4U-1A as well, which is seen in the other photo. That happens to be the oldest Corsair flying today, and was originally fitted with the typical F4U-1A double-braced canopy. Its been reported over the years that Planes of Fame has an original double-braced canopy for it, but they've never gotten around to restoring it and swapping it out with the later canopy that it is currently fitted with.
Their F4U-1A was used in the filming of the tv series "Blacksheep Squadron" and at that time it did have the braced canopy. The braced canopy was removed after the series when the F4U-1A was overhauled, had a passenger seat installed behind the pilot's seat and painted in a overall glossy sea blue scheme. If I recall correctly, that would have been in the late 1980's.
 
Phantastic repaints, John!
My son (5) will love the "Planes" repaint. He knows more about "Planes" (the movie, of course) than his old Dad. I'll surprise him with this livery when it's out. His eyes will be as big as saucers when I present this to him in the sim.

Cheers,
Mark
 
I respect and admire everyone who produces the fabulous repaints we see here every day, but I sometimes think that some people's style (or eye, or whatever) suits a particular model especially well. Jankees just seems to 'get' the WoP 3 P-51D and I think you have this bird absolutely nailed - wonderful stuff.
 
Back
Top