GregP
Major
I've seen the process of reprofiling a wing on 3 or 4 Reno racers. They apply putty, and sand until smooth; then sand until it matches the profile template laid over the wing surface. The intent is to change the basic airfoil shape, not cover rivets. It works.
I can imagine that in wartime, they sprayed and then sanded until they just started to see the tops of the rivets, stopped, wiped with tack cloth, and painted. You'd never see the rivets after painting. If using flush rivets, it would take complete care of the occasional raised rivet head that is proud by maybe 0.001" due to poor countersinking.
Not sure if everyone is aware, but the Mooney Acclaim is the fastest piston single of the nominal 4-place variety. It is flush riveted for only about the front 1/3 of the wing and has universal rivets on the rest s you move to the trailing edge. That tells me something about the drag and where it is highest.
I can imagine that in wartime, they sprayed and then sanded until they just started to see the tops of the rivets, stopped, wiped with tack cloth, and painted. You'd never see the rivets after painting. If using flush rivets, it would take complete care of the occasional raised rivet head that is proud by maybe 0.001" due to poor countersinking.
Not sure if everyone is aware, but the Mooney Acclaim is the fastest piston single of the nominal 4-place variety. It is flush riveted for only about the front 1/3 of the wing and has universal rivets on the rest s you move to the trailing edge. That tells me something about the drag and where it is highest.