by woundedbear » Fri Mar 11, 2016 2:27 am
I would like to thank davidchoate, and Bill Gaylord for their advice. I have decided to build one of my 400 series P-51 kit's wings straight out of the box. This is something I should have done in the first place, but I did learn from the first build. I used push pins instead of tailor's pins, this is something I found on this forum, and it has made a big difference. I don't recall who's idea it was, but the other Guillow's kits I have built, so far, have been a big improvement over the first of the 400 series P-51 kit I build. My 300 series Piper Cub, and the two 500 series planes have perfectly straight fuselages. The first 400 series P-51's fuselage was as crooked as a dog's hind leg, but it wasn't a complete right off. Besides learning about using the push pins with wide shoulders that will hold down the parts along their edges, instead of tailor's pins, or T-pins that hold the parts by pearcing the wood. This not only does a better job of holding the parts in place, but if there is a wrinckle in the plans sheet the wide shouldered push pins will prevent the wrinckles from misaliging the parts, plus you don't poke alot of pin holes in the wood. After building the fuselage, and seeing the crookness of the center keel, I stared using the push pins. The vertical stabilizer, and the horizontal stabilizer assemblies came out perfectly straight. While sanding the leading, and trailing edges of the tail assemblies, I discovered that the CA glue was very hard, and that alot more wood was sanded away as a result, leaving the tail surfaces lumpy. I still use CA glue but sparingly, I've read that CA glue is very heavy compared to solvent based glues. I now use SIG Bond an aliphatic resin glue, I doubt it is mush lighter than CA glue, but it sands better, "without removing so much wood", and is said to be both Dope, and Fuel proof. Thined Ambroid I think would be the lightest glue to use, but the Ambroid company is no longer in business, so maybe I could find it on, "evil bay", for a ridiculous price, " I'll have to look into that". I do have one question, is there a tool that is designed to set the tail assemblies on the fuselage, and hold them inplace while the glue dries ? If there is such a tool where can one be purchased ? If such a tool or jig is available, can it be ajusted to set the angle of the Horizontal stabilized, and also set the vertical stabilizer at a such a degree that the trial, and error method would unnecessary. Such a jig would make setting up the tail of a free flight model airplane in such a way that flights would be much more perdictable, and if flying in a restricted field for instance, the tail could be dialled in to keep the model from going (OOS) Out Of Sight. This would be good for me, in that the field where I will be doing most of my flights, is relatively small, having a model plane trimed to fly in a smallish circles, would save my efforts from becomng tall tree causualties.