Geoffers - Italeri 1/72 Wessex UH.5 - Royal Navy Rescue helicopter
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And also heavily used!! Wessex were renowned for throwing grease off the rotor head onto the upper cockpit perspex and down the tail cone!!! Not so much exhaust marking but definitely off the head!!! (It was a pig of a job greasing it - 56 grease nipples all requiring masses of XG284 which had to be purged i.e. totally replace the old grease). There lies the tale of someone wo has done plenty of rotor head greases over the years!!!Comment
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Thanks Mark :thumb2:
And also heavily used!! Wessex were renowned for throwing grease off the rotor head onto the upper cockpit perspex and down the tail cone!!! Not so much exhaust marking but definitely off the head!!! (It was a pig of a job greasing it - 56 grease nipples all requiring masses of XG284 which had to be purged i.e. totally replace the old grease). There lies the tale of someone wo has done plenty of rotor head greases over the years!!!
Geoff.Comment
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Because of naval aircrafts proximity to the sea, 771 Wessex were often 10 to 20 feet off the sea and its corrosive effects on the alloys used in the frames and skin. They were frequently washed with fresh water then coated with poor mans WD40 after. This occurred daily.
In the early days, 60's and 70's WD40 was used to protect the skin, it also gave the skin a nice shiny coat. The cheaper substitute MoD named PX24 didn't leave such a high shine! in fact it smeared terribly.
Another 'fact'. Not all SAR helicopters in the RN were of the Blue and DayGlo orange variety. 706 Squadron at Culdrose who did the night and long range SAR in their Sea Kings were all dark sea blue. As were 819 Squadron at Prestwick Ayrshire. (Thats the unit I did SAR duties on). In the early 90's 819 SAR Sea kings were replaced by a detachment of 771's Sea King 6's in the standard RN SAR livery of blue and dayglo!Comment
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