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Messerschmitt Bf 109 raised
Published 25.05.2010 Updated 07.06..2010
The
Messerschmitt
Bf 109
G-2/R6 “Yellow 3” was raised 22 May.
Since the location of our “Yellow 3” last summer a lot
of planning and preparations has been done to ensure
that the recovery could be done in a safe way. When you
are dealing with an airplane that has been in the sea
for nearly 70 years you can never safely assume that the
structure is strong enough to withstand the loads of
lifting. You are always working with a lot of unknown
factors and each of these factors will have an effect on
the success or failure of the total operation.

Several days
before the recovery, the Nærøy Aquaservice and the Folla
Diving Club had connected the main lifting straps. At
the Norwegian Aviation Museum, special strengthening
plates to go around the leading edges of the wings had
been made. The main lifting straps were to go on top of
the plates together with attachments for additional
strapping of the engine. We planned to hoist the
airplane almost to the surface and then turn it to a
horizontal position when still submerged. It was not to
be! The first problem emerged when it was not possible
to secure the engine by using straps attached to the
propeller blades. The mud on the bottom was simply too
hard for digging. It then became necessary to use straps
wrapped around the engine instead. This method was used
as an emergency because we very much wanted to have the
engine as well as the propeller to the surface in one
operation. The main lifting straps were installed the
week before the recovery but the extra straps securing
the engine were installed the day of the recovery. To
unstuck the “Yellow 3” from the bottom, a load on the
winch of nearly ten tons had to be used. When you know
that the normal empty weight of this airplane is a
little more than 2.5 tons, you can well imagine the
loads imposed on the structure!

After being unstuck, the weight of the airplane was 6
tons. Deduct from this the 2.5 tons of “clean” airplane
and you have the weight of the silt collected inside the
structure through the years!
The recovery vessel
“Camilla” left Rørvik harbor at 9 in the morning. The
“Yellow 3” broke surface at 12 and the vessel was back
in the harbor at 1530. Deduct from this 2 hrs of voyage
to and from the wreck site and you have the actual
working hours. This is includes the strapping of the
engine. To then say that the whole operation went
smoothly is an understatement! It was brilliant and
performed in a very professional way from all involved.

The extra straps added to secure the engine was not
sufficient in order to keep the engine in a straight
line to the fuselage. The 20 mm Mg151 gun is protruding
almost half a meter through the firewall and into the
cockpit. Because the engine shifted somewhat to the
side, this gun got stuck to the firewall. Due to the
limited space on the deck of the recovery vessel, the
gun could not be unstuck at the site safely. A decision
was then made to hoist the airplane on board as it was
and to keep it vertically hanging from the crane with
the engine resting on the deck of “Camilla” until safely
ashore. This decision however, prevented us in removing
the securing strap on the tail of the airplane until
“Yellow 3” was lowered on to the pier. Because of the
rather bad condition of the tail section, a calculated
risk was made to have a go with this strap still
fastened. Because the most important part for us to
salvage was the front end of the fuselage, it was
important for us to have this part as intact as
possible. We finally managed to disconnect the gun and
the engine from the rest of the airplane before hoisting
it on to the pier.
The lowering of the
airplane to a horizontal position was almost a success
but as expected the tail broke loose when in a close to
horizontal position. The breakage was at the point of
attachment of the securing strap and at the (for us)
best point where you had the least damage to salvageable
parts.

A team of more than 18 volunteers from the Norwegian
Aviation Museum and the Bodø Aviation Historical Society
(BAHS) together with several others from the Rørvik area
did the dismantling of the aircraft. First-aid
preservation to the parts was made at the pier before
transportation to Bodø. The wings are still awaiting
transportation to Bodø. Because of an ongoing strike in
the transport sector we do not know when we can expect
them arriving at the museum.

The last week has been quite hectic with permanent
preservation to the most fragile parts being performed.
Still we have a lot of work to do until we can relax a
little in our activities of preserving all parts
recovered.
Already an
agreement on the restoration of the wings at Karl
Birczaks workshop in Hereg, Hungary is finalized. As
soon as we can have the still useful parts from the
wings of “Yellow 3” transported to Hereg, this part of
the rebuild will start. Also in principle, an agreement
of the rebuild of the tail section will most likely
result in the aft part of the fuselage being made at
Hartmair Leichtbau in Freising, Germany.
A local team
will have a go on the DB605 engine, starting as soon as
they get organized with tools and workshop.
If all goes
as planned, this indicates a hectic year ahead for a lot
of people!
A special thank you goes to the Nærøy Aquaservice and
the crew aboard the “Camilla” as well as the team from
Folla Diving Club for their great help and
professionalism in this operation. Without them this
addition to the collection of the Norwegian Aviation
Museum has not been possible. Also the positive attitude
from the local community of Rørvik was instrumental for
the successful outcome of this operation.
The
Norwegian Aviation Museum has decided that the
Messerschmitt Bf109 to go on show inside the museum some
years from now will be “Yellow 3”. This will be a
fitting tribute to the locals from Rørvik that made it
all happen!
►Video from the raising of the Messerschmitt Bf
109 at namdalsavisa.no (In Norwegian)
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