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A Pair of Pups Options
Sticky Wickett
#61 Posted : 30 May 2017 12:39:24

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Top notch work there!

Regards,
Phil W.
Completed projects: 1/43 scale Bedford HA van / 1/43 scale MG TD sports car
Current projects: 1/48 scale U-boat [U230]
Future projects: 1/148 scale railway diorama / 1/50 scale R/C Volvo F89 logging truck / 1/148 scale Thunderbirds Fireflash
Plymouth57
#62 Posted : 04 June 2017 16:36:31

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Thanks again to Ron and Phil!Blushing Its amazing how much history turns up in old barns!CoolRight then, on to...

The Wicker Chair:

Although this part of the build is only appearing now to finish off the detailed cockpit, and you have already seen some of the scratch build resin parts, this was actually my very first foray into the art of resin casting! It was a lucky thing too as I now use this mould as a ‘dump’ for any excess liquid resin when casting the other parts (I hate wasting the stuff!)Blushing and I now literally have about twenty of the things!
Photo 1 shows the beginning of the design with the paper base of the kit chair glued onto a scrap of clear Perspex. This is from a sheet I’ve had for many years and on which the supposedly protective printed polythene sheet has bonded itself permanently in place! Although no good for display cases now, it’s still useful for things like this. I have drilled a series of 0.5mm holes around the edge of the paper piece into which I hammered a set of 0.5mm brass rods as illustrated in Photo 2. These will form the uprights of the willow chair frame and, as shown in Photos 3 and 4, the actual woven strands are formed from the same single 0.2mm wire previously used for the internal bracing in the cockpit frame.
My intension was to use solder to ‘fill in’ the woven strands to secure the whole chair together, unfortunately this didn’t quite work out. Despite using the proper flux I just couldn’t get the solder to flow into the wire well enough to preserve the fine detail in all the weaving. When it did seep in it was too thick and I only did a part of the back before giving up and applying thin super glue to finish the task. I did try using the micro flame jet to make the solder flow – big mistake! The brass rods got so hot they melted the Perspex and the entire chair dropped out! Anyway, the chair back remained in one piece and I was able to use my finest wire snips to carefully cut the rounded shape of the back out from the rest of the woven mesh, (Photo 5). In case you’re wondering why I didn’t just cut the brass rods to that shape in the first place before all the wasted weaving – it was too ruddy fiddly!Blink It was much easier to create a curved rectangle and cut that down afterwards. In fact, maybe it was all the finger oil from pulling the strands tight during the basket making that prevented the solder from melting in – probably should have dunked the whole thing in white vinegar first to de-grease it! Since the Perspex was no longer with us it was necessary to create a new plasticard base for the metal back to sit on. This was done, and a rounded edge was created, by forming a length of thicker solder around the contours of the chair as seen in Photo 6. Also seen in this photo is another piece of plasticard sanded down to represent the leather cushion. To further keep everything together the wickerwork part was given a couple thick coats of Admiralty Yellow Ochre. All parts of the chair were super glued together. After the cushion was glued in the whole thing was given a coat of Revell Aqua Colour 36/89 Beige as a final sealer as seen in Photo 7. Before beginning to construct the silicone mould for casting the chair, I first cut another scrap of 1mm plasticard about 1mm smaller than the base of the chair together with a short piece of wooden square about an inch in length. The plasticard was glued to the bottom of the chair and then onto the top of the wooden square. This would create a ‘peg’ with which to pull the cast chair from the mould together with a groove around the underside, providing a guide for a razor saw to cut the chair off the ‘sprue’. (Not my idea I hasten to add – I saw this method used on some commercial chair castings!)Cool The mould box was made up from the lego bricks bought specifically for this with a base of blue modelling clay with a hole cut out for the wooden plug, see Photo 8. After making the polygonal depressions for the mould locators I filled up the lego box with the DWR Plastics RTV Silicone Moulding Rubber pre-mixed with 3% catalyst. When that had cured overnight (although a couple of hours would have been sufficient), the box was taken apart and the blue clay removed. The exposed bottom of the rubber mould was then painted twice with liquid wax release agent (again from DWR) and the lego box rebuilt around the now upside down rubber mould. After pouring in a smaller amount of the rubber I was left with the original chair embedded in a now, two part mould. This mould is seen in use in Photo 9, resin is poured into the chair cavity and the square mould is gently squeezed to remove any trapped air bubbles (but not always successfully). The second part of the mould is then popped on top and the left over resin poured into that to fill up the plug. The resin begins to cure and change colour after about three minutes. Surprisingly, larger areas of resin cure quicker than thinner ones (chemical reactions and heat etc etc) so the plug goes a pretty tan colour first. Because the chair itself is quite thin it’s best to wait about thirty minutes before pulling it out of the mould. The cast resin chair is shown in Photo 10 along with the remains of the original which was destroyed removing it from the rubber mould – one of the dangers of using a single silicone mould (the second part of this one is just the wooden plug ‘overflow’ – the entire chair is in the bottom part of the mould.) The motley brown spots on the cast chair is some of the beige paint which was pulled off by the silicone mould rubber, as successive chairs were cast, so the brown diminished and eventually disappeared. The other essential item which the wicker chair was going to need before it could be installed, was a safety harness. Known as a ‘Lap Strap’ this was a very rudimentary device consisting of a simple belt made of leather and canvas, which, as the name suggests, just fitted around the pilot’s waist or lap. An actual surviving example is shown in Photo 11. The shorter piece is on the pilot’s right with the longer one on his left. What is not shown here is the wire cable which passes through the two holes on the left of both straps and is connected to a metal clamp which is in turn fastened to the wooden fuselage cross beam under the chair. The operation of the Lap Strap is quite simple, the leather part with all the holes in it is pulled tight across the lap and under the leather band on the shorter right hand section, engaging the three metal prongs into whichever set of holes fits best. The lower metal bar (which you might notice has a small ring on the end) is swung up, locking the leather belt in place and the little sprung curved spike on the top of the short belt passes through that ring locking the whole assembly in place. The only problem with the Navy Pups that I can see is that the pilot may have had to release the belt in order to reach the ammo drum on the Lewis gun to reload it! (Hopefully not rolling the aircraft in the process!)Blink
The create the belts I decided to use an old favourite medium of mine – DecraLed self adhesive lead strip. Photo 12 illustrates the longer strap in the process of creation with a single large strap complete with the rows of holes pierced through using a sewing needle and then fitted up with a series of thin strips to provide the edging and re-enforcement pieces. Photo 13 shows the smaller strap together with a piece of plastic mesh, which was supposed to provide the wooden grating on the DelPrado Victory! I spent a long time trying to work out how to make the three prongs on the end of this section – stretched sprue? brass rod? Plus many others. In the end the solution was so easy – the size of this mesh exactly fitted the size of the prongs, all I had to do was to razor blade off a triple set from the mesh as shown in Photo 14 and super glue it onto the end. The attachments on the end of each strap were made from the single strand wire and a couple scraps of plasticard, carefully cut to shape and sanded down thinner. Plasticard also provided the long and short locking arms. These are the white pieces shown in Photo 15 with the completed lead straps alongside the original kit paper ones. Both straps and the wicker chair were then given a good spray of the Poundland Grey Primer to prepare them for painting as shown in Photo 16.
And now the finicky bit! In Photo 17, the three parts have been given their respective basic coats. The wicker chair, now ironically temporarily glued to the same wooden plug used to create it’s master has had a good thick coat of Revell Matt 88 Enamel, whilst the two straps have got leather parts in Vallejo Model Color 70.818 Red Leather with the canvas sections picked out in Admiralty Yellow Ochre (which by coincidence is exactly the same shade as the Revell 88) The metal parts are in Citadel Bolt Gun Metal. Once the basic scheme was fully dried I could then get to work with the shading and high-lighting to bring out the textures and details. The chair was given depth with a wash of Citadel Rust Brown Ink (thinned right down) with the darker Skaven Brown Ink used to deepen the shading around the cushion and the rounded edging at the top. When that was dry I used a mixture of Admiralty Yellow Ochre and Humbrol Matt White Acrylic to dry brush the raised detail of the wickerwork. Finally for the chair, the seat cushion was painted with Humbrol Aqua Color 361/79 Greyish Blue (the RAF uniform blue-grey) to represent a leather cushion. This was finished off with a thinned down Citadel Black Ink wash for the creases and the RAF plus a little white mixture to dry brush the edges.
The straps also went through the wash and dry brush procedure. As you can see in Photo 18, the canvas sections were dry brushed with a lightened Yellow Ochre, followed by a Skaven Brown Ink wash to shadow the inner edges of the straps and the matt Vallejo Red Leather was gone over with Humbrol Satin Acrylic varnish to give the leather a slight sheen. Finally, the metal parts were given a wash of Black Ink to pick out the raised details. Rather than gluing the ends of the straps to the wooden frame member as I’d originally intended, I came to the conclusion that if I did it that way, there was no guarantee that the chair would fit between them! It was far easier therefore to bend the pliable straps over the chair sides, ensuring the ends were at ‘ground level’ and gluing them in place with a drop of super glue under the curves. Photos 19 and 20 illustrate the completed chair assembly ready for fitting into the cockpit, which I’m relieved to say, it did – but only just!BigGrin With the chair firmly in place I then discovered that the brass air pump for the fuel tank wouldn’t fit in place. This was due entirely to the false cockpit floor pushing everything up by about 5mm. The only solution is shown in Photo 21 – instead of having the pump with its handle open, I had to cut off the handle shaft and model it in the closed position. (I also had to mount it a little more forward than I intended too!) Now I’ve just got to make up the little fuel tank pressure gauge and glue that in before you can see the finished cockpit ‘before and after’ photos in the next instalment.

Until then, Happy Modelling to you All.


Robin.
Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
The Wicker Seat pic 1.JPG
The Wicker Seat pic 2.JPG
The Wicker Seat pic 3.JPG
The Wicker Seat pic 4.JPG
First wooden ship: The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second: Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third: HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1
Gandale
#63 Posted : 04 June 2017 22:34:33

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Fabulous piece of work with that chair Robin, great scratch building....Drool Love Drool Love

Regards

Alan
Markwarren
#64 Posted : 04 June 2017 23:12:59

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Stunning piece of scratch building. You've done a great job with the wicker chair.Drool

Mark
ian smith
#65 Posted : 08 June 2017 21:17:42

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Looking good Robin. Cool BigGrin
Current builds.Hachettes build the bismark,HMS Victory, HMS Hood.
Finished Builds Corel HMS Victory cross section.
MFG
#66 Posted : 08 June 2017 22:41:19

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Hi,

Well I must confess that's it's not very often that I get stuck for words, but after looking though your diary I am just that - the level of detail in this build is extraordinary with a high quality of skill for all to see - Amazing

May.
Plymouth57
#67 Posted : 10 June 2017 21:05:28

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Many thanks as usual to Alan, Mark and Ian, I really enjoyed the wicker chair episode, despite trashing the original making the rubber mould! Should I carry on with more of these lovely kits I'll have a good supply of the things ready to go!BigGrin
And May, thank you so much for those wonderful comments - greatly appreciated with a warm glow every time I come back!Blushing Blushing (Or it might be just my bladder's way of telling me to nip down the loft ladder sharpish!!BigGrin LOL )

This is a shortie just to finish off the cockpit upgrade and a final comparison between the two versions before the outer skinning gets under way. No.1's fuselage is done now, and I'm working on No.2 which, just like the cockpit is requiring a lot more work for reasons you'll see later!

First off, apologies for the vanishing air pressure gauge! The photos of the ‘completed’ cockpit were actually taken before I’d decided to knock up a dial for the fuel tank air pressure gauge! This means although its shown in place at the beginning, it isn’t there in the final shots!Blushing
Photo 23 shows the raw material for the gauge. Rather than build something from scratch, I had plenty of early casting attempts of the instrument panel (air bubbles, bit missing etc) so I simply cut down one of them to get the larger dial and a little bit of surround. On my reference photo, the dial is fitted onto a simple plywood curved-bottom ‘facia’ board, which is screwed onto the wooden frame on the port side. There is also a pair of brass contacts which stick through the wood and are presumably connected to something in behind. Photo 24 shows the gauge after firstly a spray of grey primer followed by Vallejo Mahogany for the wooden base coat. This was then washed over with a thinned down Admiralty Yellow Ochre to give it a more ply-woodey colour with the dial itself picked out in Citadel Chaos Black. After that was dry, I applied one of the WW1 aircraft instrument decals as seen here and drilled out the top of the base to accept a pair of wires. These were super glued at the back to secure them and afterwards snipped off, protruding from the front, and the rear bits ground down smooth. Next a blob of Kristal Klear was applied to the face of the dial and once dried and turned clear, looked as it appears in Photo 25. A small drop of super glue secured the finished gauge in position as shown in Photo 26. Photos 27 and 28 then illustrate the finished cockpit (minus the gauge). These two shots plus the following Photos 29 to 32 which give an all round view of the two cockpit variations: basic kit and ‘cram everything in’ all illustrate the problem of trying to build on a false floor level! As you can see, the chair is much higher up in the scratch build, which takes up a lot of the available space. There is one extra item not shown here however, which I’ll have to include in later shots as No.2 gets her outer skin additions – an extra ammunition drum for the Lewis Gun. I managed to fit one in under the forward part of the air pump. In reality the Pups used to carry at least two spares and sometimes three. Since the resin Lewis Gun is an upgrade mentioned in the kit instructions (both Pups are getting one) I might include some extra drums in the basic version – there’s enough room in that one to get them in!BigGrin
In the next instalment its back to No.1 again as she gets her outer skin – and what a difference that makes to her!Cool

Until then, Happy Modelling to you All!


Robin.
Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
The Wicker Seat pic 5.JPG
The Wicker Seat pic 6.JPG
First wooden ship: The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second: Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third: HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1
Metal Mech
#68 Posted : 11 June 2017 05:34:56

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Love the side by side comparison photos.

DeAgostini kit builds:

Millennium Falcon: 18% Complete
Shelby GT-500: 28% Complete
Thunderbird 2: 13.75% Complete
Markwarren
#69 Posted : 11 June 2017 09:27:50

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Nice to see the differences, just gets better and better.Love

Mark
Sticky Wickett
#70 Posted : 13 June 2017 15:29:36

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Love the attention to detail. Very nice indeed!Blink

Regards,
Phil W.
Completed projects: 1/43 scale Bedford HA van / 1/43 scale MG TD sports car
Current projects: 1/48 scale U-boat [U230]
Future projects: 1/148 scale railway diorama / 1/50 scale R/C Volvo F89 logging truck / 1/148 scale Thunderbirds Fireflash
MFG
#71 Posted : 13 June 2017 18:17:20

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Plymouth57 wrote:
And May, thank you so much for those wonderful comments - greatly appreciated with a warm glow every time I come back!Blushing Blushing (Or it might be just my bladder's way of telling me to nip down the loft ladder sharpish!!BigGrin LOL


Hi,

LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL

Again I am left speechless BigGrin

May.
Plymouth57
#72 Posted : 18 June 2017 21:24:27

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Thanks again to Metal Mech, Mark and Phil, building the two side by side is a great way to show just how much extra has been crammed in the second version!Blink
I thought you might like that one May!BigGrin

And now No.1 really begins to take shape as she receives her outer skin...

The first task was to add on the second engine firewall, which is glued to the front of the first one. Photo 1 shows the piece being cut out after gluing it to the 1mm card backing. In Photo 2 we have the newly cut out paper skin for the port side of the fuselage, the little oval piece is another one of those extras, namely the inspection panel which is bolted on to the aluminium casing. There is another extra to be fitted on later which is a second layer for the ‘D’ shaped frame of the pilot’s foot ladder in the side of the fuselage (inside the roundel). Strangely, you could only mount the Pup from the port side – there is no corresponding foot rest on the starboard side! Photos 3 and 4 illustrate the paper skin after gluing on to the cardboard base. Great care is needed on this stage when using the Roket glue, as mentioned previously, it has a virtually instant ‘grab’ unlike standard PVA adhesive. Glue is first applied to the rim of the inner firewall, the engine bay spacers and the fuselage side under the rear of the cockpit area and then the skin is offered up to the top edge of the fuselage, keeping it straight and aligned with the inner firewall. As long as that part is fitted on perfectly, the rear section should then follow the line of the slab sided fuselage all the way back to the tail. I used a fairly stiff ¼ inch flat brush to apply a largish pool of glue and smooth it all over the rear of the fuselage before pressing the paper down into position. Great care must also be taken not to get carried away in the application and push down hard on the fuselage – that tail skid is very delicate and will collapse under any weight!Blink Photo 5 shows the starboard skin in the process of going on, awaiting the brushed on glue on the rear of the card before being stuck down. With the two side panels safely glued down, the next step was the belly skin as shown in Photo 6. This goes straight through from front to back, but with a V shaped cut out in the front, which will be filled in with a separate piece afterwards. The channel thus formed is part of the engine cooling system, with no actual exhaust pipe as seen on the later inline engines, cold air is forced past the spinning rotary engine cylinders and back through this channel. If you look closely at the printed skin panel, you can even see the exhaust marks from the castor oil!Cool The little rectangular dark panel is the exit point for the Vickers machine gun cartridges – since these Pups don’t have the Vickers I’m not sure if that should be there – although I suppose its possible all the Pups were fitted with the ejector chute opening, even if they didn’t have the ejector chute! Photo 7 illustrates the bottom skin in place together with a little ‘up-grade’ for the basic kit. Although the kit is printed in a subtle silver ink on the aluminium parts, after adding on the optional extras like the engine access panels on the sides, we have that old ‘white edge’ again to the stuck on pieces. The best solution was to carefully paint the whole area after the extras went on and here I’ve used my bottle of thirty year old, Citadel Mithril Silver acrylic paint. I’ve got bottles of Citadel acrylic less than half that age which have gone rock hard – how this one carries on like the day it was bought I have no idea – I just wish they were all like it! Anyway, this old paint is an incredible match for the printed silver – almost indistinguishable! Photo 8 shows that little V shaped piece in place – I did run a Dremel type circular saw blade along the forward edges to simulate the bolts before giving it a coat of the Mithril to tie it all in together. The black paint spot above the access panel marks the position of the little tubular carburettor air intakes which go on later.
With three sides done, only the top remains. This is composed of two sections – the engine bay aluminium ‘bonnet’ with the front part of the plywood cockpit panel and the longer rear section composed of the rest of the plywood and the fabric section back to the tail-plane and rudder. The bonnet section is shown in Photo 9. It is printed with a rectangular panel right in front of the cockpit and two circles (just visible), which are the filler caps for the petrol and oil tanks. I decided to add a new panel on together with a pair of discs cut from a resin sprue. The panel went on before gluing the paper piece onto the fuselage, the filler caps went on afterwards before the silver paint as shown in Photo 10. (I've since realised that that rectangular panel is a blanking section that fills in the hole in the aluminium top where the breech of the Vickers sits - the Lewis gun machines simply filled this in with a panel!)
The final section to be added on is the top fuselage rear piece. As illustrated in Photo 11, this section has the rear part of the cockpit plywood surround together with the fabric covering from there back to the tail plane. There is a slightly noticeable join in the two plywood areas, but this is covered up later with another optional extra part to ‘bulk up’ the leather surround to the cockpit edges. Photo 12 shows another of those optional extras – a separate add on for the aluminium panel on the side of the cockpit. Not too sure what that is for, however it is situated in the vicinity of the castor oil tank and I did find out there is a regulator valve for the oil flow, which is not accessible by the pilot, it may possibly be something to do with that. The paper panel was given eight raised screw heads by poking the paper gently from the back with a darning needle (without piercing through) and then the panel was painted with the Citadel Mithril and allowed to dry before gluing it in place as shown here. There is a subtle bend in the upper fuselage panel where it reaches the tail plane as shown in Photo 13. The paper panel is marked with two score lines on the sheet and they must be lightly scored before the part is cut out. Although the dotted line is printed across the panel, its very difficult to pick it out without the ‘overflow’ lines on the white scrap paper which of course are lost when the part is cut away from the sheet!
Finally, in Photo 14, a comparison shot illustrating how the spacer ribs seen on No.2 allow the skins to change the fuselage contours from essentially a box at the back to an elegant cylinder at the front. No.2 (of course) will be requiring a lot more work than the basic kit before I can begin the follow up skinning procedure. Unlike No.1, she will be receiving three types of surface finish – the same paper skin for the fabric sections but with White Beech wood veneer to represent the plywood, whilst the aluminium will be…. well, aluminium!BigGrin In order to glue down these different materials I’ll need a bit more surface to glue on to, the first job therefore will be to pad out the fuselage with balsa wood inlays around the cowling and the curved top. So that will be the subject of the next instalment.

Until then, Happy Modelling to you All!


Robin.
Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
Fuselage skin pic 1.JPG
Fuselage skin pic 2.JPG
Fuselage skin pic 3.JPG
Fuselage skin pic 4.JPG
First wooden ship: The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second: Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third: HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1
Markwarren
#73 Posted : 18 June 2017 21:39:27

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Nice updat, excellently work.BigGrin

Mark
nightwisher
#74 Posted : 18 June 2017 21:44:37

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Some more fantastic work,exquisite detail as usual. Mithril silver that brings back great memories of painting games workshop minis.
Man he took his time in the sun
Had a dream to understand
A single grain of sand
He gave birth to poetry
But one day will cease to be
Greet the last light of the library...We were here!
Gandale
#75 Posted : 18 June 2017 22:52:37

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Really taking shape now and looking great.... Drool Drool

Regards

Alan
magpie1832
#76 Posted : 18 June 2017 23:30:51

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Lovely work, doing a top job, great skills you have.

Chris Cool Cool
On the bench

1/350 Revell Tirpitz Platinum Edition (Pontos PE and Wooden deck) plus extra Eduard PE set and extra MK1 door sets.




Spal
#77 Posted : 18 June 2017 23:42:31

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Looking superb Robin BigGrin

Al
MFG
#78 Posted : 19 June 2017 00:37:21

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Hi,

another beautifully scripted diary entry, amazing build

May.
Plymouth57
#79 Posted : 24 June 2017 20:57:12

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Thanks again to Mark, Nightwisher, Alan, Chris, Al and May!BigGrin Yes, I too have very fond memories of the Games Workshop - if only we'd had the home resin casting materials available now back then, I could have saved a whole lot of money!!Blushing
I haven't done as much as I wanted over the last week - the heatwave makes the attic workroom unbearable - despite the skylight and a cooling fan working overtime the temperature was in the 90's! You just can't work on paper models with hands dripping with sweat! Much nicer now though so catching up fast!BigGrin

And now No.2 gets to put on her 'undies'!BigGrin

As the cockpit surround which is made of varnished plywood in the original is going to be fabricated from a very thin real wood veneer, the point where the fabric rear fuselage (paper) and veneer meet will require a solid surface in order to glue to two different materials down. Photo 1 shows the rear top fuselage receiving the first layer of balsa inlay consisting of a single strip of balsa from the wooden top panel back to the tailplane. This will then be supplemented with a smaller piece on top to continue the curved support for the veneer. The pencil line drawn across the top of the port side, (near the number 14) marks the end of the veneer section. Photo 2 illustrates the similar approach to the front cowling area which will be covered by a thin aluminium sheet which will again require the support underneath. Two simple rectangles of balsa are glued in here which will be sanded back later into the curved surface needed. Photo 3 shows the main open cockpit area safely covered up by masking tape, there’s going to be some energetic sanding going on shortly and I don’t want all that sawdust getting down inside!Blink The front cowling was actually sanded down first and by the time that was finished I was looking for a quicker method – it took ages! Fortunately the longer pieces on the fuselage went ‘with the grain’ unlike the front bits so I was able to carefully shave away the majority of the excess wood with a sharp razor blade leaving just the finishing off to be completed with the sandpaper as shown here in Photo 4 and the sanding completed in Photo 5. Likewise in Photo 6, the front cowling top has been sanded back smooth, this is the part which took a long time, mainly trying not to over-sand the balsa, removing the cardboard bulkheads in the process. The next task was to fill in the conical side panel areas – this is where the circular front of the cowling gradually reduces down to the flat rear fuselage. As you can see in Photo 7, this was constructed from a series of triangular sections, each one slightly smaller than the last until the top of the fuselage was reached. This was then sanded down smooth, again avoiding the card formers until the shape was correct and then only the smaller lower section below card piece 16* remained to fill in, with triangles again as shown in Photos 8 and 9.
Photo 10 shows the port side paper skin ready to go on just as per No.1 but with a couple of additions. The wing root hole has been cut out as before but I have also cut out the middle of the foot rest within the roundel. The skin was then held against the fuselage and the position of the cut out pencilled onto the card body. The card was then carefully cut into with the pointed knife blade until I had cut right through and removed the ‘D’ shape entirely (that’s it between the fuselage and the skin). In the real aircraft the foot rest is a metal surround screwed to the frame with the doped linen cut away for the pilot’s boot to stick through as he climbs into the cockpit. After that I then turned the skin over and, using the skylight as a ‘light box’ marked the positions of the frame work on the rear of the paper. These were then pencilled in lightly and using a blunt metal implement, I scored the frames into the paper leaving a proud impression (or is that an expression?) on the printed side. This isn’t very noticeable in the photos at the moment but when the light is just right you can make out the ‘more 3D’ effect around the exterior cockpit area. Finally Photo 11 shows the first skin section glued in place. You can make out the now hollow foot hole awaiting its outer metal ‘D’ and the cut out wing root location. Unfortunately I forgot to take any photos when the fuselage top and bottom skins went on but you’ll see them in-situ in the next instalment when the reason for all that balsa infill becomes apparent!

Until then, Happy Modelling to you All!


Robin.
Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
No 2 Fuselage skin pic 1.JPG
No 2 Fuselage skin pic 2.JPG
No 2 Fuselage skin pic 3.JPG
First wooden ship: The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second: Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third: HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1
ModelMania
#80 Posted : 28 June 2017 12:07:52

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Fabulous work Robin, love all of the scratchbuilt details that you are adding. Should be stunning when you've finished, well done on a great effort. Cool ThumpUp


Kev
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