Nieuport 28C-1
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The "skin" of the Nieuport 28 is constructed the same way it was by the French during WWI. Much of the process is illustrated in the photos below. The surfaces are constructed of strips of poplar about 25 mm wide and 0.8 mm thick which are laid over a mold. Another layer of strips is glued on the bias. When dry, a layer of fabric is doped on the outer surface. The skins are then glued over a typical wooden spar and rib structure. This technique made for a light but strong structural covering.


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©1998 Smithsonian Institution
#W1998CM00014

Jan, 1998
Volunteer Max Gainer with a piece of the fuselage top decking. The base layer of poplar strips can be seen cleary. These were overlayed on the bias over a mold and then covered with linen and doped.

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©1998 Smithsonian Institution
#W1998CM0051
Dec, 1998
Volunteer Peter Johnson builds up one of the elevator skins on a mold. These consist of the 25mm-wide, 0.8mm thick poplar strips laid on the mold with another layer of strips glued across the top. When dry, the wood was covered with a layer of fabric which was doped on. The skins were then glued to the wood structure seen behind him in the enlarged photo.


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©1998 Smithsonian Institution
#W1998CM0052

December, 1998
The nearly complete vertical stabilizer and rudder. The skins were glued over the wooden spar and rib structure and all that remains is to dope on the fabric. As with the rest of the empennage and the skins on the forward fuselage, the surfaces were constructed using the French poplar-strip technique described above.

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©1999 Smithsonian Institution
#W1999CM0001

March, 1999
This photo shows the completed vertical stabilizer and rudder on the Nieuport 28, before painting. Here, the fabric layer has been doped onto the outer surface of the skins. These are now ready for final color application.