Wildpig wrote:I've only built one laser cut kit. The only negative I found was the edges of the parts were browned by the laser. But, it was really no big deal. I either cleaned up the edges with sandpaper or just ignored it if it isn't visible when assembled.
I often forget to clean that off, and it shows through the covering. I believe bleach, or maybe some other solutions will remove it, without sanding away any material. Even worse are part numbers showing through the covering.
Modern CAD could give the opportunity to make some of these designs easier to build, but I haven't heard of any such changes to the design. I'm reworking my old P51 build (close your eyes, it's not up to my recent standards)
by building new tail feathers and wing. Hand cutting actually produces more accurate parts than the die-cut parts, when done accurately, but it is still not an easy wing to construct. The old hand drawn designs basically take the easiest approach, which is to build a perimeter from stock, and piece it all together to match the plan. For the P51's LE, this is a bit of effort, as it has a few jogs. With CAD, you can slice through the formers and design a plate for the wing center, that would create the complex LE and form the dihedral, all at the same time. Definitely some opportunities here to make the builds a bit simpler.
We'll do the LE a bit differently here, making a 1 piece LE with dihedral and LE profile pre-set. Not an easy part of this wing construction.
Not the easiest wing to construct and build straight.
It just came to my mind today, that I could have ordered the laser cut wing sheet parts for this kit. I'll definitely do that the next time. The laser cut parts provide a really good option, for those of us wanting to rebuild parts of our old kits. The old P51 below, with new tail feathers and wing under construction.