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Everything posted by ccoyle
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The top wing took several days. You won't believe what happened! I was cutting out the skins one evening when suddenly . . . . . . I got bored. 😮 Yeah, weird, right? So that was it for that particular night, but the task is finished now. First a shot of the framing: This is pretty substandard framing by Kartonowa Kolekcja standards, so I added a strip of scrap card atop the two spars to stiffen everything properly. The main skins were not difficult, and lozenge camouflage does a fantastic job of um, well -- camouflaging any tiny mistakes. The biggest issue was with the wingtip pieces -- these ended up being too small to pinch together neatly. I tried filling the gaps with pieces cut from the kit's spare color swatch, but I didn't like the look of the repair, so instead, I filled the gaps with layers of glue and later painted them with AK colors. You can't really see anything in this shot, but I think the repairs turned out okay. That's it for now!
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Welcome aboard! Wooden ship builds are categorized by year of launch, so your Bluenose will go in the "Kit build logs for subjects built from 1901 - Present Day" sub-forum. That's where you'll find the new topic button. Make sure to read the "starting and naming your build log" pinned topic at the to of the sub-forum. Cheers!
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Very handsomely done!
- 34 replies
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Skinning the Fuselage The top deck of the fuselage behind the cockpit is a separate skin. To better position it, I added some joiner strips along the edges of the fuselage framing. The sides and top went on without too much difficulty. There are alternate parts for doubling the engine compartment sides -- those will be next, along with the louvered vents.
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The tail skid is part of one of the aft fuselage frames. It's a part that just dangles out in space and begs to be broken off repeatedly, so I soaked it in thin CA to stiffen it. It made no difference. 😑 I'll let you imagine which "special word" involuntarily escaped my lips when this happened. It was either: !@#$ @#$! #$!@ or $!@# I won't tell you which one it was!
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Did you at least get a satisfying "ka-pwing" out of the tweezers?
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Yeah, that's your typical machine stitching -- very ill-suited to scale modeling. I agree that making another is the right option.
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