by woundedbear » Thu Jul 16, 2015 11:17 pm
Thanks for your replies WIDDOG and McGunny, SIG sells 1/16 x 1/16 x 36 stringer stock if you click on the arrow at the end you will find 1/16 x 3/32, 1/16 x 1/8, and that list goes on. If you click on 3/32 and go to the right end you click there you will see 3/32 x 3/32 x 36 and that list goes on to 3/32 x 3/8 x 36 and then 3/32 x 1/4, 5/16, 1/2 and on to 3/4. I have bought their contest wood in 1/32 and 1/16 and it is incredibly light and goes up to 3/8 x 4 x 36, just click on the down arrow at the right end. I have an idea about a twin motor electric airplane, in my head, haven't put anything on paper yet though. But I was thinking the De Havilland Hornet, an aircraft that I never saw before this year. It was developed as a long range fighter by the same folks who came up with the Mosquito, the wooden wonder of World War 2 fame. Came along too late, but I can't seem to get it off my mind, so I have pitched the idea of some companies like Guillows and some dude that cuts kits of out production airplanes, but nobody seems to be interested in such an obscure airplane. Of course if I ever get around to it, I'll build it much simpler version. Squared off wings, vertical, and horizontal stabilizers. Not even a canopy, and a fuselage that's no more than circles for formers. Just a simple elongated spindle shape, with a turned balsa wood nose cone that can be removed to get the center of gravity right. That my plane crazy friends is what is known as the KISS principle of design...Keep It Simple Stupid, "Oh yeah", I know that's one that everybody has heard before, but... works for me. There's one more thing I need an answer to. Has anyone ever built an airplane using Hard balsa 12 to 16 pounds, in the places were that kind of strength is needed. The nose, the first 2 formers, the main spar, and the leading edge of the main wing. Then use medium 9 to 12 pound balsa for the mid-section, starting about 1 former behind the main spar of the main wing. Then use soft balsa 6 to 9 pounds for the rest of the fuselage and tail surfaces, well some medium balsa for the leading edges of the vertical and horizontal stabilizers. Then sheet the whole thing with A grain contest balsa. But what about the grain of the other parts ? I was thinking C grain for the formers mid and side keels, wing ribs and tips. This is where I need advice, I am certain that I want A grain contest for covering the Fuselage, main wing, and the tail surfaces. But what about the rest of the airplane ? I have noted that when I look at the stringer stock from a Guillows kit the front and back look like C grain and the edges look like A grain. Something else I've noticed about the Guillows stringer stock It's quite hard but will bend around the fuselage easily and it's not very heavy . Well that's it same questions I asked when I started this thread just a little more refined.