I am a new member of this forum and am still trying to navigate how it works. It is a little different from other ones that I use.
My project is a 1941 Taylorcraft L2 (AKA O-57, DC-65). It is SN 4063, N55348. Military SN 42-7789. Finished Nov. 7, 1941, one month before Pearl Harbor. That makes it the 22nd of the first 24 "straight" L2's.
The airplane last flew in 1956. It was not damaged but needed some major covering repairs. It has not changed hands but a couple of times since then so it is very complete. The sad part is that it was not well stored and suffered considerable distortion.
I purchased it about 1987 and did considerable work on it over the next 10 years. The fuselage is basically ready for cover. Then life happened and it has sat in the back of my hangar for the next 25 years. This year I retired from working on other peoples airplanes and determined to focus on this restoration. The biggest challenge now is restoring the wings. They have the original metal ribs and spars with plenty of corrosion. So far this year, I have totally disassembled one wing and began working on it piece by piece: Cleaning, blasting, treating corrosion, and priming. I have found that most of the parts are airworthy. I now have that first wing partially re-assembled.
I live in Green Valley, AZ and work at Ryan Field (KRYN) in Tucson. I appreciate any suggestions and comments.
Jerry Miel
My project is a 1941 Taylorcraft L2 (AKA O-57, DC-65). It is SN 4063, N55348. Military SN 42-7789. Finished Nov. 7, 1941, one month before Pearl Harbor. That makes it the 22nd of the first 24 "straight" L2's.
The airplane last flew in 1956. It was not damaged but needed some major covering repairs. It has not changed hands but a couple of times since then so it is very complete. The sad part is that it was not well stored and suffered considerable distortion.
I purchased it about 1987 and did considerable work on it over the next 10 years. The fuselage is basically ready for cover. Then life happened and it has sat in the back of my hangar for the next 25 years. This year I retired from working on other peoples airplanes and determined to focus on this restoration. The biggest challenge now is restoring the wings. They have the original metal ribs and spars with plenty of corrosion. So far this year, I have totally disassembled one wing and began working on it piece by piece: Cleaning, blasting, treating corrosion, and priming. I have found that most of the parts are airworthy. I now have that first wing partially re-assembled.
I live in Green Valley, AZ and work at Ryan Field (KRYN) in Tucson. I appreciate any suggestions and comments.
Jerry Miel
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