• J3-Cub.com is the largest community of J3-Cub pilots, owners and enthusiasts. With over 1000 active members, we have fostered a vibrant community and extensive knowledge base. J3-Cub.com hosts a library of over 13 years of technical discussions, J3 data, tutorials, plane builds, guides, technical manuals and more. J3-Cub.com also hosts an extensive library of J3-Cub photos.

    Access to the J3-Cub.com community is by subscription only. Membership is only $49.99/year or $6.99/month to gain access to this community and extensive unmatched library of knowledge.

    Click Here to Become a Subscribing Member

    You will also get two J3-Cub decals as well!

Leaving old Army repairs alone or make new repairs

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

FlaL4

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 23, 2010
Messages
475
Reaction score
89
This subject came up in another thread and is probably worthy of a discussion. The question is what do you do with an old Army repair that was badly done when restoring a WW II aircraft . The aircraft has been in storage since 1953 and there have been no records of accidents or repairs either civilian or military since 1943. Should you:

1. Leave it alone.
2. Try to improve it as best you can but leave the original repair in place.
3. Remove damages area and replace with new skin and flush rivet for factory new appearance.

We believe our O-58A has the original cowling on it because of the mulitiple layers of Olive Drab paint, the documentation of the Army Field repair in 1943. The cowling still shows evidence of it's original 1941 design vs the 1/15/1943 drawing update. Below or some photos that will aid the discussion.


Original round air filter on early serial # L-3 same as my O-58A



Wright Patterson L-3 with late design cowling


Early L-3, Pacific Theater with original round filter with either a modified cowling or replacement unit.

 
Last edited:

Latest posts

Back
Top