Two of my squadmates asked me to see if I could find any information from Bf 109 airframe mechanics manuals about the wing radiator cutoff valves. I found a number of things but am confused.
1. The wing radiators were introduced with the Bf 109 F1. They had cutoff valves installed in the radiators but, were never hooked up for remote operation by the pilot.
2. This sorry affair stayed that way untill the late model G6 and G10/14 and K4. Supposedly the valves remote shutoff machinary was then a factory standardised installation process.
3. The Finns performed feild mods to allow their pilots to make use of these cutoff valves in the event of damage to a radiator. And supposidly the german squaderons were issued kits to do the same.
4. I've looked at as many 109G-K cockpit photos as I can. And as many manuals. I cannot see matching levers or valve handels anywhere in the cockpits as feild mods. The Finns described two matching pull levers mounted to the bottom left and right hand sides of the instrument panel.
5. From a K4 manual with a schematic of the cockpit there is a three way twist lever called:
KühlerklappenverstellungItem no. 58
http://deutscheluftwaffe.de/archiv/Dokumente/ABC/m/Messerschmitt/Me%20109/109K-4Layout.jpgKühlerklappenverstellung
Kühler - radiator
klappen - valve
verstellung - direction valve
Item no. 49 from the K4 cockpit drawing.
Natzuggriff fur Farhwerk
Starting with the 109 F1 was a cable control for the coolant systems firewall mounted thermostat valve to either lock it open or allow the bimetal heat controller to respond the the hot glycol/water(stoff).
So is the three position handel (Kühlerklappenverstellung) in the K4 cockpit the control for the radiator shutoff valves?
With all the engine related automation in the 109's I would think this would have been just another automated emergency system controlled with two preassure sensative valves. Anyway I'm clueless to why proving these valves were ever enabled for the pilot to use.....