Hey all, I'm hoping to get some advice. I'm having a hell of a time covering a balsa model with tissue (Guillow's Spirit of St. Louis). Is doing this without wrinkles and otherwise getting a smooth, professional finish some kind of black art? Is it something that really takes a lot of time and practice to get right or am I just a total moron (I certainly wouldn't rule out the latter!). My model is for display purposes, not flight, so weight is not a concern - it can be as heavy as it wants to as far as I'm concerned. What I do want is as smooth and good looking a finish as I can possibly get.
I'm using a product called Aero Gloss Dope from Midwest Products. The bottle says it is Gloss Clear. I'm using it without thinner as recommended by the hobby shop I purchased it from. The tissue I'm using is that which came with the kit. I usually wet the frame with dope, let it get a bit sticky, put the tissue on and then brush on additional dope directly on the tissue, and then I pull the tissue as tight as I can without breaking the tissue or the wood I'm pulling against (which really isn't a lot of force mind you - I'm not reefing or it with all my might or anything)
It's my understanding that the dope should pull the tissue tight, but my experience is more that that the dope just hardens the tissue...if it's even just a little loose when first put on the frame, it will generally remain loose once it dries.
Maybe my framing is as good as it needs to be to do this properly? Maybe I'm using tissue pieces that are too large? My method could be completely wrong? I've kind of settled on the idea that this is my first model and it's just not going to be as nice as I wanted it to be, but I wanted to post this message to see if I'm maybe just doing something very wrong.
I am aware of and I have read some of the other posts on this and will continue to locate and read the others. So far however they're not really helping too much....any help, thoughts or just general comments on the above would be appreciated.