HAZE PAINT
IN AUSTRALIA

F-4
Lightning 41-2156 in Haze Paint as loaned to 75 Squadron RAAF
in late 1943. (Artwork: Juanita Franzi)
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The
first F-4 Lightnings delivered to Australia were painted in
a special camouflage scheme that was optimised for high altitude
reconnaissance aircraft. This scheme was known as Haze Paint.
This paint was developed by Samuel Cabot Inc., of Boston Massachusetts
drawing upon research by Lord Rayleigh whose paper on scattering
of light was published by the Royal Society in 1914. In February
1940, a sample of the paint was supplied to Professor J.C. Hunsaker
of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and he in turn
sought advice from S.Q. Duntley of the Passive Defense Project
of the Physical Measurement Laboratory. The paint was described
by Samuel Cabot as a "colloidal dispersion of white mineral
pigment in coal tar solvent naptha and fixative oils."
Minute particles in the pigment served to scatter light, emulating
the process that causes the sky to appear blue and thus light
reflected by the paint appears blue. However, when applied over
polished natural metal, the metal itself would reflect orange
light. This would negate any camouflage advantage when applied
to metal aircraft. Duntley suggested applying the paint over
a matte black undercoat and this eliminated the orange reflection.
In August 1940, samples of the paint were supplied to the Naval
Research Laboratory, the Army Corps of Engineers and the Army
Air Corps but all reported that they were unable to find a use
for it. Later, Duntley sighted drums of Haze paint in storage
and initiated enquiries with Professor John Trump of the National
Defense Research Committee. Given that the effect of the new
paint had been described as creating the appearance of a pool
of water, it should not be surprising that the paint was first
tested on a ship. Trials with the minesweeper USS Puffin,
the starboard side of which was painted with the new paint (with
a black undercoat) while the port side remained Dark Navy Grey,
showed that the new paint "markedly reduced the visibility
of the boat and was vastly superior to the Navy Gray on the
port side." This was a turning point for the new paint,
later formulations of which were applied to the photo reconnaissance
version of the Lockheed P-38 which was designated F-4.
HAZE PAINT IN AUSTRALIA
- A CHRONOLOGY
02APR42 |
|
Wing
Commander C. McK. Henry, Air Attache at the Australian Legation
in Washington, DC wrote to the Air Board at Victoria Barracks,
Melbourne to advise that a five gallon drum of Haze Paint
had been despatched to No. 1 Aircraft Depot, Melbourne.
Attached to the memo were three colour chips. |
25APR42 |
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RAAF
HQ directed the Director of Technical Services to clear
the drum of paint on arrival and forward it to No. 1 Aircraft
Depot at Laverton. |
30APR42 |
|
Wing
Commander Henry wrote again to advise that the drum had
been shipped on the S.S. Port St John. |
30APR42 |
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Note
on file: "Find out what happened to the 'three colour
chips'. The whole scheme depends on them." |
12MAY42 |
|
Note
on file: "Arrange to have the whereabouts of this paint
discovered ... How far would 5 gallons go?" |
30JUN42 |
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Note
on file: "Cleared and delivered to P/O McKean HQ." |
02JUL42 |
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Director
of Technical Services has received drum and asks; "What
action is required?" |
06JUL42 |
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DTS
suggests applying the paint to a Buffalo of the Photo Reconnaissance
Unit. |
29JUL42 |
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P/O
McKean, RAAF HQ to DTS: "A suitable black undercoat
has been found. Is it still desired to experiment on a Buffalo
or would some other aircraft be preferred for initial tests?
As a matter of interest, work is in hand to produce this
material locally, and a certain measure of success has already
been achieved." |
30JUL42 |
|
Note
on file: "A Kittyhawk may be available for test. Buffaloes
are u/s for tank mod." |
31JUL42 |
|
RAAF
HQ to DTS: "The only readily available aircraft for
the test is a Wackett Trainer. It is thought that useful
data will be gained using this a/c from the aspect of aerial
observation both when the a/c is on the ground and flying
and also from the ground viewing the aircraft against the
sky at various heights up to 14000 feet. A direction is
requested please." |
14AUG42 |
|
RAAF
HQ to 1AD: Requested that Wirraway A20-536 be made available
for camouflage tests on completion of a 240 hourly service.
Form E/E.88 for A20-536 does not mention an allotment for
these tests although the aircraft is on charge to 1AD at
the time. |
31AUG42 |
|
First RAAF F-4 (A55-1) received at 1AD Laverton in Haze
Paint. |
04SEP42 |
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Second RAAF F-4 (A55-2) received at 1AD Laverton in Haze
Paint. |
05SEP42 |
|
Signal
from 1AD to Air Board: "Wirraway A20-536 complete 240
hourly inspected. Aircraft now available for camouflage
tests." |
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By
this time, 1AD had been able to physically examine two Haze
painted F-4s after they had endured a long voyage from the
USA, most likely as deck cargo. Probably it soon emerged
that the Lightning was "cutting edge" enough for
the RAAF without having to apply a similarly cutting edge
paint finish. It is likely that the trials with the Wirraway
did not proceed. When A55-1 and A55-2 were delivered to
1PRU, their original Haze Paint had been replaced with standard
RAAF camouflage. |
28OCT42 |
|
F-4 A55-1 and A55-2 were delivered to 1PRU. |
20NOV42 |
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Note on file
by F/O McKean:
(a) |
The paint itself was inherently defective due to bad
settling of the pigment, excessive skin and aggregate
formation and very slow drying (3 days). The drying
rate was a big objection owing to the tacky film collecting
dust, thus nullifying the effectiveness of any tests. |
(b)
|
The
paint was an oil base product. This would not adhere
well over the lacquer type finish used by RAAF and
in addition when touching up any a/c surface coated
with this finish, it would be necessary to strip down
to bare metal as you cannot recover with lacquer an
oil base paint. This position is obviously aggravated
on fabric doped with A.W.D. (All Weather Dope) |
(c)
|
The
paint could not be satisfactorily made in Australia
due to the special grinding and dispersing techniques
involved and the supply position of the white pigments
required. (Notwithstanding his earlier advice of "a
certain measure of success", see 29JUL42.) |
"For
these reasons it was felt that this paint had no advantages
to offer over existing RAAF procedure."
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Showing
considerably more than a "slightly mottled appearance",
F-4 Lightning 41-2217 of the 8th Photo Reconnaissance Squadron
USAAF on a test flight over Moreton Bay soon after it was erected
at Eagle Farm in November 1942. Note the patchy appearance of
the Haze Paint on what is ostensibly a new aircraft. As these
aircraft were transported from the USA as deck cargo, it is speculated
that the removal of sealing tape may have damaged the paint finish.
Picture: State Library of Queensland (#156806) |
Instructions for the
Painting of Aircraft with Haze Paint
The specifications
for applying Haze Paint were very demanding. The instructions
came with the comment; "It is nearly impossible to avoid
a slightly mottled appearance. This is neither advantageous
nor disadvantageous, since the mottled effect is invisible at
a short distance." The instructions summarised the requirements
as follows:
1. |
Make
sure the black under-coat is smooth and non-glossy. |
2. |
Keep
the Haze Paint well stirred. |
3. |
Keep
the air pressure low. |
4. |
Keep
the spray nozzle within eight inches of the surface. |
5. |
Build
up the coat gradually until it matches the proper chip. |
Evidently, the conclusion
of a nation unprepared for war might be paraphrased as; Too
hard!
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SOURCES
|
National Archives
of Australia: A705, 62/1/304 |
Instructions for
the Painting of Aircraft with Haze Paint (Contained within
the above NAA file) |
Duntley S.Q., Research
Paper 5, Haze Paint, Passive Defense Project, Physical
Measurement Laboratory, 7 July 1941. (Contained within the above
NAA file) |
Issue |
Date |
Remarks |
1 |
02MAR25 |
Original
issue.
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