Now, for the custom registration. I needed it in blue to fit with the rest of my chosen colour scheme, so the decals that came with the kit were not going to work. In one of the pictures in the previous post, you will notice that I drew the registration letters on the CAD drawing and in the correct scale. These were then printed separately using a thin outline. The "ZU" part of the registration is used in South Africa for Non Type Certified Aircraft (similar to US LSA) and the KIR is simply the first three letters of my son's first name:
The little circles are for the wheels, but those I will show in my next update.
You can actually print directly on tissue paper, but a few previous projects had taught me that it only works for small details. If you try to print on a big sheet of tissue, it always tends to get crumpled up in the printer. That is the reason why I did not print the blue tissue pattern in my previous post directly.
I work on A4 paper, in the US you will obviously do this on Letter size. The previous paper print served two purposes:
1) It was a test and I could check the size, etc. against the model.
2) It showed me exactly where on the paper the printed image was going to come out, so I could align the tissue correctly.
The next step is to cut a small piece of the blue tissue that is just big enough for the letters. Once again, too big a piece of tissue and you are likely to end up with disaster as your printer eats it up. I placed this tissue over the letters and taped all the edges carefully down with clear sellotape. The type of tape is not very important, but it is a good idea to use something thin (in other words, not masking tape) so it won't interfere with your printer's feeder. In the photograph below, you can just make out the previous test print showing through the thin tissue:
This prepared sheet of paper with tissue stuck to it was then put into my printer. By the way, the printer is a simple inkjet printer. It probably would work just as well in a laser printer, but I haven't tried that before. Of course you need to make sure the paper goes in exactly the same orientation it went the first time. To make sure I didn't stuff that up, I actually drew a small arrow on the paper before I sent it through the printer the first time.
I was lucky and everything went well the first time, so this is what I ended up with - a nicely printed outline ready to cut out:
Before cutting the letters out, I removed the tissue, chalked the back and sealed it again with some sprayed on clear dope, exactly as I had done with the earlier blue tissue patterns. The dope also helped to stiffen the tissue slightly, making cutting a bit easier.
In order to apply the letters, I took a small piece of low-tack Tamiya masking tape and marked the location of each letter from my original paper template. I also cut out the paper template at this point, held it where I wanted it on the model and then used that to place the masking tape. Once the masking tape was placed, I started gluing each letter, one at a time. Again the dope was simply re-activated by flooding clean thinners through using a small brush. The picture below should explain how the masking tape helped to place the letters:
And with the masking tape guide removed:
By the way, the cowl was not painted blue, but also covered in blue tissue paper. That is a process that needs a bit of patience, but nothing particularly difficult. I used a few pieces of wet tissue to cover the cowling, using the normal dope and thinners approach. The picture also shows the canopy already glued on. I used a very cheap acrylic glue that works well as it dries completely clear. You should be able to recognize acrylic glue (as opposed to PVA glue) by the fact that it looks milky white with a slight blue tint in the bottle. At least, all acrylic glues I have seen here looked like that.