• Smithsonian
    Institution
  • Smithsonian
    Journeys
  • Smithsonian
    Store
  • Smithsonian
    Channel
  • goSmithsonian
    Visitors Guide
  • Smithsonian
    magazine

AirSpaceMag.com

  • Subscribe
  • Home
  • History of Flight
  • Flight Today
  • Military Aviation
  • Space Exploration
  • Need to Know
  • How Things Work
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Blogs
  • History of Flight

Yellow 10

Something about the Champlin Fighter Museum's Focke-Wulf 190D never seemed quite right.

  • By Howard Stansfield
  • Air & Space magazine, September 2003
 

 
Tweet

Article Tools

 
  • Font
  • Email
  • Print
  • Comments (2)
  • RSS
  • Related Topics

    Airplane Restoration

    Luftwaffe

    Propeller Aircraft

    Fighters

    WWII

    SOME AIRPLANES JUST LOOK MEANER THAN OTHERS, and Yellow 10, an ultra-rare German Focke-Wulf 190D-13 fighter, is one of them. With an elongated snout housing a massive inverted V-12 engine, three 20-mm cannon, and perfect knife-like proportions, the “butcher bird,” as the Luftwaffe nicknamed it, has always looked as if it would cheerfully go for the throat of any of the other airplanes in its Arizona hangar.

    During World War II, D-series 190s—called Doras—could outclimb and outrun anything the Allies put into the air, thanks to a Junkers Jumo 213 E piston engine capable of churning out 2,200 horsepower. (The P-51D Mustang’s Merlin V-12, by comparison, could muster only 1,700 hp.) Doras also featured an almost unfathomably complex mechanical “brain box” which allowed their pilots to concern themselves with only a single power lever while their Allied counterparts had to manage separate propeller, mixture, and throttle controls.

    For more than two decades, visitors to the Champlin Fighter Museum in Mesa, Arizona, gawked at the dapple-gray Dora without ever realizing that the impressive showpiece was actually a gigantic jumble of mismatched parts. Those in the know had always suspected there was something wrong with Yellow 10 (the name refers to the yellow Luftwaffe squadron number stenciled on its side): The ammo chutes in its wings didn’t line up with the armament, and no one could ever quite manage to get the ailerons connected to the control stick in a logical way.

    Academics speculated—but could never prove—that the U.S. Air Force was to blame. Immediately after the war, Yellow 10 and a differently armed variant were brought Stateside for testing, and it’s thought that when the fighters were crated up in the late 1940s for sale on the surplus market, their wings were accidentally switched.

    The effort to correct the mismatch gained impetus two years ago, when museum owner Doug Champlin acquired the first of three demilitarized cannon to install in his Dora. “That was when we decided we either needed to make this wing work, or we needed to switch it,” remembers resident museum restorer David Goss.

    After years of conversations, the Arizona team finally convinced officials at the U.S. Air Force Museum at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio—home of the other Dora, an Fw 190D-9 on long-term loan from the Smithsonian—to swap wings with them. When the wings arrived, they fit Yellow 10 perfectly, solving the mystery of the flight control mismatches. In order for D-13s to accommodate a newly included cannon that fired through the engine and out the fighter’s signature holed spinner (earlier versions of the Fw 190 had a machine gun), German engineers were forced to route aileron control tubes further aft in the wings.

    The wing switch also helped shed light on Focke-Wulf’s construction techniques. When the new wing was flayed open as part of Yellow 10’s current restoration, Goss and his crew were treated to the sound of dozens of shims—slivers of metal jammed in the structure to tighten a shoddy fit—cascading loose. Upon further examination, they also discovered hints of an odd process that may have been used to shear a stringer—a thin aluminum spar that runs along the top of the wing—from its metal stock. It’s apparent that someone bent the metal back and forth until it broke off, rather than go to the trouble of making a clean cut. The grim explanation: Yellow 10 was largely the handiwork of slaves upon whom German industry increasingly relied as the war dragged on. Seen in this light, the sloppiness takes on significance; maybe snapping off the metal was as much an act of defiance as of expediency.

    Goss and Champlin feel all of this history must be preserved. Says Goss: “In 100 years, if someone decides to go looking inside this airplane, we want them to understand how things were done in Germany.”

    SOME AIRPLANES JUST LOOK MEANER THAN OTHERS, and Yellow 10, an ultra-rare German Focke-Wulf 190D-13 fighter, is one of them. With an elongated snout housing a massive inverted V-12 engine, three 20-mm cannon, and perfect knife-like proportions, the “butcher bird,” as the Luftwaffe nicknamed it, has always looked as if it would cheerfully go for the throat of any of the other airplanes in its Arizona hangar.

    During World War II, D-series 190s—called Doras—could outclimb and outrun anything the Allies put into the air, thanks to a Junkers Jumo 213 E piston engine capable of churning out 2,200 horsepower. (The P-51D Mustang’s Merlin V-12, by comparison, could muster only 1,700 hp.) Doras also featured an almost unfathomably complex mechanical “brain box” which allowed their pilots to concern themselves with only a single power lever while their Allied counterparts had to manage separate propeller, mixture, and throttle controls.

    For more than two decades, visitors to the Champlin Fighter Museum in Mesa, Arizona, gawked at the dapple-gray Dora without ever realizing that the impressive showpiece was actually a gigantic jumble of mismatched parts. Those in the know had always suspected there was something wrong with Yellow 10 (the name refers to the yellow Luftwaffe squadron number stenciled on its side): The ammo chutes in its wings didn’t line up with the armament, and no one could ever quite manage to get the ailerons connected to the control stick in a logical way.

    Academics speculated—but could never prove—that the U.S. Air Force was to blame. Immediately after the war, Yellow 10 and a differently armed variant were brought Stateside for testing, and it’s thought that when the fighters were crated up in the late 1940s for sale on the surplus market, their wings were accidentally switched.

    The effort to correct the mismatch gained impetus two years ago, when museum owner Doug Champlin acquired the first of three demilitarized cannon to install in his Dora. “That was when we decided we either needed to make this wing work, or we needed to switch it,” remembers resident museum restorer David Goss.

    After years of conversations, the Arizona team finally convinced officials at the U.S. Air Force Museum at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio—home of the other Dora, an Fw 190D-9 on long-term loan from the Smithsonian—to swap wings with them. When the wings arrived, they fit Yellow 10 perfectly, solving the mystery of the flight control mismatches. In order for D-13s to accommodate a newly included cannon that fired through the engine and out the fighter’s signature holed spinner (earlier versions of the Fw 190 had a machine gun), German engineers were forced to route aileron control tubes further aft in the wings.

    The wing switch also helped shed light on Focke-Wulf’s construction techniques. When the new wing was flayed open as part of Yellow 10’s current restoration, Goss and his crew were treated to the sound of dozens of shims—slivers of metal jammed in the structure to tighten a shoddy fit—cascading loose. Upon further examination, they also discovered hints of an odd process that may have been used to shear a stringer—a thin aluminum spar that runs along the top of the wing—from its metal stock. It’s apparent that someone bent the metal back and forth until it broke off, rather than go to the trouble of making a clean cut. The grim explanation: Yellow 10 was largely the handiwork of slaves upon whom German industry increasingly relied as the war dragged on. Seen in this light, the sloppiness takes on significance; maybe snapping off the metal was as much an act of defiance as of expediency.

    Goss and Champlin feel all of this history must be preserved. Says Goss: “In 100 years, if someone decides to go looking inside this airplane, we want them to understand how things were done in Germany.”

    To that end, a good deal of Goss and Champlin’s energies have gone into undoing the airplane’s first restoration, which Champlin commissioned shortly after he acquired the Dora in 1972. Although that effort, done with advice from the fighter’s designer, Kurt Tank, arrested the airplane’s deterioration, it also stripped away much of its history.

    “This time around, I said, ‘Let’s do this thing right,’ ” says Champlin. That’s meant fabricating entire assemblies, such as ammo chutes and access covers for the cannon, from scratch. It has also meant replacing non-metric rivets and non-period switches and circuit breakers installed during the first restoration with originals or faithful reproductions. Champlin even paid a French company $7,000 for custom-made metric rivets for the wings. “For that amount, you could normally expect to buy enough for an entire plane,” Goss says. The team has also reinstalled the shims in the wing, but has chosen to smooth the edges of other roughly cut metal parts as a safety precaution for those who may work on Yellow 10 in the future.

    While Goss steers the restoration, Champlin spends much of his time tracking down radios, instruments, and other bits of Dora minutiae. The task, he says, has been made easier by the Internet and by warbird parts discovered in the former East Germany—resources unavailable in the 1970s.

    Goss and Champlin expect to be finished with the airplane early next year. Although the fighter will be perfectly flyable, Champlin says that as long as he owns it, Yellow 10 will remain earthbound. “It’s just too rare,” he says. “We’ll start it up and taxi it, but that’s all we’re gonna do. It’d just be criminal to fly it.”


    1 2 Next »



    Related topics: Airplane Restoration Luftwaffe Propeller Aircraft Fighters WWII


    Tweet Digg
     
    Comments (2)

    I'd like to know if Yellow 10 is also now with the rest of the exhibit in Seattle. I also read that it might possibly be for sale and would like to know more about that. Is there a website that I can go to to learn more about the sale? Thanks Don Bowman

    Posted by Don Bowman on April 8,2010 | 06:38 PM

    While searching the web for articles on my favorite WWII fighter,the FW190D,your article from a 2001 issue surfaced.Back in the early-eighties,my wife,daughter and I decided to take advantage of Eastern air lines weekend flyer program and take a trip from our home in Austell Georgia to Phoenix to see the Grand Canyon. After the trip to the canyon,we had some time to stop by the Champlin fighter museum. It was shear happenstance that we did this. I still remember walking through the display area and seeing this machine. I had a flash back to my teenage years in Hapeville Georgia where a similiar plane was subject to my frequent visits after school. It sat on its belly in a weedy lot behind a flower shop two blocks from my home gradually deteriorating.I and my like minded buddies speculated on where it came from and what was it doing here. After reading the placard in front of the restored machine in Arizona, I saw that it had come from Atlanta.I knew now where the machine had gone while I was off at college in the late sixties. Seeing it restored to like new condition caused considerable exitement.I think my next stop will be to Seattle to reaquaint myself with the Dora. Maybe I will be able to catch an engine runup.

    Posted by Tim Keane on November 13,2011 | 07:57 PM

    Post a Comment


    Name: (required)

    Email: (required)

    Comment:

    Comments are moderated, and will not appear until Smithsonian.com has approved them. Smithsonian reserves the right not to post any comments that are unlawful, threatening, offensive, defamatory, invasive of a person's privacy, inappropriate, confidential or proprietary, political messages, product endorsements, or other content that might otherwise violate any laws or policies.



    Advertisement


    Most Popular

    • Viewed
    • Emailed
    • Commented
    • Topics
    1. The World From Your Airplane Window
    2. The Jet as Art
    3. Ride-Sharing With the Rich
    4. D’oh! 10 Goofs in Space
    5. Thuds, the Ridge, and 100 Missions North
    6. Grab the Airplane and Go
    7. Combat on Canvas
    8. Inside the Enola Gay
    9. 100 Years of Marine Aviation
    10. At the B-17 Co-op
    1. 100 Years of Marine Aviation
    2. At the B-17 Co-op
    3. D.A.S.H. Goes to War
    4. A Sudden Loss of Altitude
    5. The Daring Mr. Moisant
    6. Ground Proximity Warnings
    7. Ride-Sharing With the Rich
    8. *Pilot Not Included
    9. Or Die Trying
    10. The Other Harlem
    1. 100 Years of Marine Aviation
    2. Why do airline seats have to be in an upright position during takeoff?
    3. World War II: The Movie
    4. I Have Today Seen Wilbur Wright and his Great White Bird
    5. Why do we have to turn off iPods during takeoff?
    6. At the B-17 Co-op
    7. Commentary: Metric Mayhem
    8. Restoration: Beech Staggerwing
    9. Above & Beyond: The Village of Tempelhof
    10. The Other Air Forces
    1. Bombers
    2. Cold War Era
    3. 20th Century Aviation
    4. Vietnam War
    5. Experimental Aircraft
    6. Golden Age of Flight
    7. Military Aviators
    8. Aviators
    9. Air Racing
    10. Aerospace Technology
    11. Fighters

    View All Most Popular »

    Advertisement


    Follow Us

    Air & Space Magazine
    @airspacemag
    Follow Air & Space Magazine on Twitter

    Sign up for regular email updates from Smithsonian.com, including daily newsletters and special offers.

    Popular Videos

    • Newest
    • Most Viewed

    The Milky Way From Orbit

    (0:22)

    Cameras Instead of Guns

    (2:00)

    Resisting Enemy Interrogation

    (1:05:34)

    Directing Hermann Goering

    (3:16)

    View All Newest Videos »

    Go For Launch!

    (3:52)

    Refueling Over Iraq

    Refueling Over Iraq

    (02:20)

    Directing Hermann Goering

    (3:16)

    Cameras Instead of Guns

    (2:00)

    View All Videos »

    In the Magazine

    FM2012 Cover

    March 2012

    • The World's Highest Laboratory
    • 100 Years of Marine Aviation
    • At the B-17 Co-op
    • Extraterrestrial Outfitter
    • World War II: The Movie

    View Table of Contents »

    Snapshot

    Underground Airliner

    A Swiss artist plans to bury a full-size 727 in the Mojave.

    Reader Scrapbook

    Over the Pacific

    Check out our scrapbook of readers' aviation and space pictures. Then add your own.


    Smithsonian Store

    24K Space Shuttle Orbiter Model

    Item No. 68048

    Smithsonian Journeys

    Astronomy in Arizona

    Enjoy exclusive observatory visits and skywatching in the southwest (May 9 - 13, 2012)




    View full archiveRecent Issues

    • FM2012 Cover
      Mar 2012


    • Jan 2012


    • Nov 2011

    Newsletter

    Sign up for regular email updates from Air & Space magazine, including free newsletters, special offers and current news updates.

    Subscribe Now

    About Us

    Air & Space/Smithsonian magazine has been delighting aerospace enthusiasts with the best writing about their favorite subject since April 1986. As an adjunct of the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum, Air & Space matches the grand scope of the Museum, encompassing every era of aviation and space exploration. With stories that range from the Wright Brothers to the design of NASA's next lunar lander, Air & Space emphasizes the human stories as well as the technology of aviation and spaceflight.

    Explore our Brands

    • goSmithsonian.com
    • Smithsonian Air & Space Museum
    • Smithsonian Student Travel
    • Smithsonian Catalogue
    • Smithsonian Journeys
    • Smithsonian Channel
    • Site Map
    • Privacy Policy
    • Copyright
    • About Air & Space
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Subscribe
    • RSS
    • Topics

    Smithsonian Institution

    Produced by Clickability