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01_Lackierung_MD-11_EN

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11/29/2011
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A new dress for “Charlie Alpha”





With their red safety harnesses around their shoulders and black safety belts between their

legs, Roman Peper and Markus Roggmann could easily be taken for models advertising an

indoor climbing venue, particularly as the two are moving around at a height of 18 metres.

However, the two men are not climbing a wall but are balancing, well secured, on the spine

of the MD-11 Charlie Alpha. Peper and Roggmann are qualified painters at Lufthansa

Technik in Hamburg and they are spraying the butt joints between the metal panels on the

exterior of the aircraft with silicone to seal them. This has to be done before the aircraft

receives a new coat of paint. Car drivers will be familiar with this technique from motorway

bridges, where a rubber strip is placed between the steel beams and the road in order to

balance out the differences in temperature. It is exactly the same with an aircraft.





Charlie Alpha looks like a seriously ill patient. It is covered in red sticking tape, while its

landing gears are wrapped up in thick plastic foil and the outer skin has been stripped down

to the metal. All the important openings and parts of the aircraft which must not come into

contact with anti-corrosive agents or paint are covered with red tape to ensure they are

absolutely watertight.

One of the first jobs when painting an aircraft involves removing the old paint – stripping – or

“striptease”, as the hangar staff call it. The outer skin of the aircraft is then sprayed with a

paint-stripper based on formic acid. The outer skin swells up after ten to twelve hours and

falls to the ground in fist-sized lumps.





Day three and four of the repainting are taken up with unscheduled sanding work. In many

places the old paint, particularly on the plastic components, was more badly affected than

expected and the cracks were deeper than feared. Dieter Steinwender, Project Manager

Aircraft Painting at Lufthansa Technik, has to rejig his schedule. But the trained electrician

still hopes that he will manage to deliver the freshly painted MD-11 newly in eleven days, as

agreed.





Dirk Trottnow, who works in the Signwriting department at Lufthansa Technik, has long since

made his contribution to the repainting of the MD-11. After entering the height, length and

width of the Lufthansa Cargo logo in the computer, he used the plotter to make the letters

which will later be emblazoned along the length of 11,500 millimetres on the right and left of

the cockpit. The individual letters, says Trottnow, are exactly 1,090 millimetres tall. Expresed

in metres, the logo is 11.5 metres long and 1.09 metres in height. Only the Lufthansa logo on

the tailfin is larger. The crane, after all, has a radius of 3.5 metres and therefore had to be

produced in three sections.





Two rooms further along in the hangar, the paint for the MD-11 is ready and waiting: 600

litres of primer for two anti-corrosive coats, 200 litres of white paint, 160 litres of grey for the

underside of the MD-11 and 40 litres of navy blue for the Lufthansa Cargo logo, the official

registration D-ALCA as well as the crane on the tailfin.





Aircraft should be repainted once every five to six years. Unavoidable cracks in the paint – a

result of severe stress – would otherwise endanger the construction of the entire aircraft. In

order to keep unavoidable overspray to a minimum, the painters use special spray guns

which electrostatically charge the paint. The aircraft then acts like a magnet and literally pulls

the paint towards it. Despite the technology, painting is a fine art, says project manager

Dieter Steinwender and testifies to his colleagues’ skills and adeptness: thee aircraft is

sprayed twice from left to right, once from top to bottom, then crosswise. And all that is done

by a team that usually has 12 members – six on either side of the aircraft. Wrapped up in

white protective overalls and equipped with breathing masks, the men are raised up and

down on one of the six work platforms (or “flying carpets”, as the Turkish colleagues call

them) which are attached to the hangar roof.





The final painting phase does not take more than two and a half hours. “Including the two

base coats of primer,” Dieter Steinwender says, “painting only accounts for between five and

eight per cent of our work.” The rest is spent on the preparations: masking, stripping the

paint, sanding, making the foils and weighing the paint. The latter is particularly important

because saving weight is the be-all and end-all of flying. That is why the all the coats of paint

together should be no thicker than a human hair. We will have about 0.12 millimetres,”

project manager Dieter Steinwender predicts. That corresponds to 450 to 500 kg of paint.

Jürgen Heermann, a journalist and ex-flight engineer on a Boeing 747, once calculated

meticulously that one more kg of weight on or in an aircraft requires an additional 200 litres of

fuel per year.



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