by Arlo DiPasquale » Tue Jun 02, 2020 11:25 am
It seems to be a common theme that we've become spoiled with laser cut kits, and I certainly fall into that camp. Its really nice to have the parts all fit together perfectly without a ton of filling, sanding, and repairing of broken parts. I do find it kind of nostalgic building die cut kits though, and I'm only 25! What I've found that works best for the problems you mentioned pretty much mirrors what Sigs and Kittyfritters said, and their models are on a whole other level than mine. In terms of finding the die cut lines to cut, if you have a light and magnifying glass that could help, as does a sharp blade. Also, you can usually flex the parts a bit while they're sill attached to the sheet to get them to pop out a slight bit and more easily find the edges to cut out all the way. The best thing I can recommend though is to just take your time. When I build a die cut kit, I treat it more as a marathon than a sprint and take my time to get the parts cut out of the sheets, to fit them, and to fill and sand since there will be significantly more filling and sanding involved. Here are the frames of a die cut Guillow's Albatros DVa I'm currently working on. Some of the parts were severely die crushed, many of the stringer notches were far too large for 1/16" sq. strip stock, and altogether it took a lot of sanding and filling to get everything to come together. However, I believe the final result is on par with what I would have produced with laser cut parts, it just took probably 2x as long.
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