by kittyfritters » Sun Dec 24, 2017 2:52 pm
The problem that most die half shell type kits have in maintaining straight fuselages is the layout of the parts. It's difficult, if not impossible, to make two identical dies for former halves and side keels. The way it's done is to make one die for the half formers and side keels, then stamp it on two sheets of balsa. Now you have the problem of trying to get two sheets of balsa with identical grain structure and density...which is impossible. To build a die cut fuselage straight you need some kind of jigging fixture to hold the parts straight.
Laser cutting does not have this problem. The laser cutter, essentially a printer/plotter that cuts, will "draw" the same part every time. Parts for both sides of the fuselage can be laid out, interleaved, on the same sheet of wood, and being cut from "the same piece of real estate" will build a straighter fuselage. In low volume production, the parts can even be designed to interlock, Chinese puzzle style, to be self-jigging. This does slow the laser cutter down quite a bit and is not usually done for high volume kit production.
Howard