Dave Gee reminded me on last Friday that the Put A Rufe Over Your Head contest was on Sunday the 19th. It was also a DOBAC contest where the club made a bulk purchase of kits and sold them to the members at cost. If you showed up at the contest with the model flyable you got your dough (the price of the kit) back. Dave told me that I had nothing to worry about, "It's laser cut. They just fall together." The kicker about the contest was the model could be built as a Zero. You got extra points if you built it with the floats. I'm not one of those rare modelers who has gotten it to fly as a Rufe so I decided to go with it as a Zero.
I also knew that my wife was not going to cut me any slack on the activities for the weekend. I made the agreement with her that I would get up early on Sunday morning, feed the cats and make breakfast before going to the contest. OK, I opened the box about 4:30 PM on Friday,
First I reviewed the plans and the parts sheets. There have been a few changes since I built my last one which was die cut. I was please to discover that the parts sheet had been redone for laser cutting so that it would be easier to built the fuselage straight. I located all the parts that would be needed to build it without the floats and got them out, ready to go and started framing up starting with the fuselage. Since I have a perfectly flat building board all I had to do was be careful to make sure that the formers on the left side of the fuselage were perpendicular to the keels. While normally I would build with TiteBond I would have the build the whole thing with CA to finish by Sunday. I had to stop around 6 to feed that cats and start dinner.
After dinner I put another 45 minutes in and got the right side of the fuselage on using my popsicle stick and clothes pin method to make sure that the half formers on the other side lined up. Then I had to stop for evening tea.
After evening tea I put the stringers on the fuselage, framed up the tail feathers, framed up the wing and got it off the board. At 11:00 I stopped to throw out the trash, set up my coffee maker for the morning, give the cats their evening treats and go to bed.
We had our bi-weekly manny-peddy scheduled for 10 AM on Saturday so we got up, fed the cats, breakfasted, showered and went to the nail salon. My wife wanted to go to a movie in the afternoon and have a late lunch/early dinner so I had and hour and a half between the nail salon and the movie to put some work in. Since I can't leave the nose of a 500 series model alone I built a nose structure under the cowl to make loading the rubber and thrust line adjustments easier. I decided to go with a box and separate nose block rather than a removable cowl since I had done this with my last Rufe and already had the measurements. If you decide to go this route according to the picture the extra reinforcement where the box meets the first former is necessary, trust me.
KF