116 FLYPAST May 2015
FROM THE WORKSHOP MOSQUITO PROTOTYPE
unique feature of W4050, we will
not hide the slats again but leave
them in working condition so
visitors can see them.
Back together
In February this year, the fuselage
was reunited with the newly restored
wing. This is not as straightforward
as it may sound. The chief concern
in handling a Mosquito fuselage,
especially a 75-year-old one
constructed using casein glue, is that
it may break at its weakest point, just
aft of the canopy.
A jury frame needed to be
fabricated and installed from
Bulkheads 2 to 4 to stop the
fuselage bending when it is
suspended from its lifting beam.
But the frame has to be removed
to allow the fuselage to be lowered
onto the wing.
Gerald Mears, de Havilland
Aircraft Museum chief engineer,
and I decided we needed to
ensure the risk of breaking the
fuselage had to be reduced to a
minimum – accomplished by the
design and manufacture of a pair
of ‘back braces’. The system had
been developed and tested for the
rebuild of the FB.VI in 2009 and
proved very successful.
The braces were mounted
on the lifting beam and, by
fine adjustment, the fuselage
could be ‘flexed’ to ensure there
were no compressive or tensile
forces acting on the jury frame.
This enabled safe removal
prior to lowering onto the wing.
The technique has also been
adopted by the Calgary Mosquito
restoration group in Canada with
our blessing.
With the fuselage attached to
the lifting beam by a pair of slings,
the back braces were fitted and
adjusted. The wing was positioned
directly underneath and aligned
with the fuselage pick-up points.
The jury frame was removed at
the last moment and the fuselage
lowered and secured to the wing
using the four main attachment
bolts. A trestle supported the
rear end of the fuselage. Then
the restored undercarriage was
refitted and W4050 was once
again supported on its own legs.
The restoration team’s intention
is to complete the Mosquito
prototype as much as possible,
ready for the 75th anniversary
on November 25, 2015. All the
work has been going on very close
to where W4050 was originally
assembled in 1940.
http://www.dehavillandmuseum.co.uk
W4050’s fl ying life
De Havilland fl ew W4050 from Hatfi eld
on initial trials up until February 19,
1941 when it was delivered to the
Aeroplane & Armament Experimental
Establishment (A&AEE) at Boscombe
Down. Five days later it broke its back
due to tailwheel castoring problems
encountered on Boscombe’s rough
surface.
The fuselage intended for the photo-
reconnaissance prototype, W4051, was transported to Boscombe Down and used
to replace W4050. Once back at Hatfi eld a strengthening strake was fi tted above
W4050’s rear fuselage access door and the engine nacelles were temporarily
fi tted with extensions to alleviate a tailplane buffeting problem.
Trials resumed at the A&AEE in March 1941 and, on the 18th, W4050 achieved
a top speed of 388mph in level fl ight at 22,000ft. Testing continued until May
when a heavy landing again split the fuselage on the port side, just aft of the
wing root. The damage was repaired by a team from de Havilland using large
plywood patches still visible today.
In mid-1941 a dummy gun turret was fi tted just aft of the cockpit canopy while
other trials included wing-mounted bombs. By October the prototype’s wing
was returned to Salisbury Hall to be modifi ed to accept two-speed, two-stage
supercharged Merlin 61s. In July 1942, W4050 achieved a top speed of 437mph in
level fl ight at 29,200ft.
In November 1942 the Merlin 61s were replaced with Merlin 70 series engines
- a Merlin 72 to port and a ’77 to starboard. The Mosquito fl ew with them
for a further year, primarily testing exhaust stubs of differing materials and
confi gurations.
The dummy gun turret used for tests at
Boscombe Down. Traces of where this chafed
on the canopy Perspex can still be seen today.
“The restoration team’s intention is to complete the Mosquito prototype as
much as possible, ready for the 75th anniversary on November 25, 2015”
Mechanism in the leading edge of the wing
for the Handley Page slats.
Slung, braced and jury rigged, the fuselage
is lowered ready for mating with the wings.
ALL IMAGES BY OR VIA AUTHOR
The only known photo of the maiden fl ight:
Geoffrey de Havilland Jr piloting the prototype
75 years ago.
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