Milo,
Why don't want to continue this in the other thread?
Let's recap our visit to the 115-liter Aux fuel tank with you.
You said the tank was not optional.
It most certainly is an optional piece of equipment, just like the 300-liter drop tank. Focke Wulf began delivering the Aircraft with the tank installed so therefore nobody could remove it was your reasoning.
You were wrong.
You said it was very difficult to remove and when Butch2k chimed in with it being impossible to remove, you changed your line to fall in with his. You claimed it was impossible to remove as well.
You were wrong times TWO.
First the tank is removable.
Second it is not a difficult task and only takes a few minutes for one man.
The tank is not a difficult maintenance task to remove and was routinely removed and replaced at the Geschwader according to the mission set up for the day by the TO. Same as any ordinance, drop tank, or mission specific equipment.
Dr. Timken says the O2 cylinders are "well out of the way" and the manual says nothing about having to move the O2.
Crump says:
I said it does not mention having to remove them in the Flugzeug-handbuch and the guys who removed the tank at White 1 do not remember having to remove them either.
The cylinders are mounted with quick release buckles, two per bank. Pop those and the bracket clips into the section span. Lift it up and move it and set the O2 cylinders out of the way (the line is flexible and still attached). Remove the Aux tank. That is if you have the rubber coated self-sealing sleeve. The bare metal just slides right out."
The second part is from
my knowledge of the 02 Cylinders removal from the Maintenance manual. The manual says nothing about either type of 115-liter aux tank.
Again you do not read what people write.
As for Bentely's excellent drawings:
I respect Bentley and do not think for a second his work is inaccurate so I offer this as a possible explanation.
After rechecking the manual and checking AGAIN with White 1 there is very little doubt IMO that Bentley is the victim of a Museum curator or his original Focke Wulf Documentation.
Be careful when looking at Museum pictures of FW-190's. Especially Aircraft restored to static display. There are plenty of mistakes, especially in interior structure for static displays. You should check out the porch screws we found in one very well known static display wingtip. They were used and ground off so that the threads just barely poked out. That is not to mention all the interior stucture that just does not belong or is inaccurate.
I would not be surprised if Bentley did not render a completely accurate drawing of a Museum's mistake.
Come down to the White 1 Museum sometime. Some of my collection is on display including some "original Focke Wulf drawings" About a dozen of them, Milo. Big fold out sheets. All with interior structure changes to the design. Every time they made a change, they made a drawing. These particular ones are for different reinforcement plate designs on some of the joints in the control surfaces.
Crumpp