Bomber_12th
SOH-CM-2025
The B-17F Memphis Belle, which has been under complete rebuild and restoration at the USAF Museum for a number of years, is reaching a milestone this week, in that with the full completion of the restoration of the wings, they are being attached to the fuselage once again, for the first time since the aircraft was dismantled and shipped to the museum facilities. The starboard-side wing is attached, and the port-side wing will be attached within the week. After that, the Belle will also be sitting on its landing gear for the first time in many years.
A bit of a photo-report can be seen here:
http://www.warbirdradio.com/2011/10/new-pictures-memphis-belle-restoration-photo-tour/
The amount of work still remaining, I believe, will mean that the aircraft is still at least a year or two away from being fully completed. The level of detail work is absolutely amazing, returning the airframe to exactly as it was when original manufactured and in service. A lot of the interior-sides of the skins, on all B-17 makes/models, throughout the wings and fuselage, were not originally primered or painted, but simply left bare metal from the factory. In most restorations, to protect the metal, a museum typically would just paint these skins in chromate primer, even though that wouldn't be authentic. On the Belle, the USAFM used a special clear-coat finish to paint the bare metal on the interior of the aircraft, which protects the metal from corossion, while keeping a completely authentic original appearance. The same level of care has been taken with every part/assembly, so what you look at is exactly as it originally was in WWII, without compromises. You'll be able to see photos from the interior of the aircraft, and know that all of the finishes and all of the equipment/hardware that you see is spot-on, as to how a WWII-era B-17F really looked.
The USAFM also has the last surviving early-model "shark-tail" B-17, "The Swoose", under restoration. It will be getting much more attention after the Belle is finished.
A bit of a photo-report can be seen here:
http://www.warbirdradio.com/2011/10/new-pictures-memphis-belle-restoration-photo-tour/
The amount of work still remaining, I believe, will mean that the aircraft is still at least a year or two away from being fully completed. The level of detail work is absolutely amazing, returning the airframe to exactly as it was when original manufactured and in service. A lot of the interior-sides of the skins, on all B-17 makes/models, throughout the wings and fuselage, were not originally primered or painted, but simply left bare metal from the factory. In most restorations, to protect the metal, a museum typically would just paint these skins in chromate primer, even though that wouldn't be authentic. On the Belle, the USAFM used a special clear-coat finish to paint the bare metal on the interior of the aircraft, which protects the metal from corossion, while keeping a completely authentic original appearance. The same level of care has been taken with every part/assembly, so what you look at is exactly as it originally was in WWII, without compromises. You'll be able to see photos from the interior of the aircraft, and know that all of the finishes and all of the equipment/hardware that you see is spot-on, as to how a WWII-era B-17F really looked.
The USAFM also has the last surviving early-model "shark-tail" B-17, "The Swoose", under restoration. It will be getting much more attention after the Belle is finished.