by kittyfritters » Fri Jul 13, 2018 11:01 pm
Good evening, Mrs, Murphy!
One of the basic constants of any project is Murphy's Law, usually stated. "If it can go wrong, it will." While I still will plow along an finish it quickly, It won't be flying this Sunday. I did get a good three hours work on it this morning, but when I went to lunch with my wife, which we do every Friday, Murphy's Law went into effect. It started when the POS system at the restaurant went into panic mode and refused to process a cash sale let alone a credit/debit card. (Actually, I found the situation rather amusing since I used to program, sell, install, and support POS systems, but I kept that to myself.) That wasted a half hour and it went downhill from there. Instead of the 4 hours I expected to put in this afternoon my work time amounted to about 45 minutes. It has gone together, quite smoothly, with only six and a half hours work in it thanks to the extremely accurate Guillow's laser cutting. As it stands now, it's framed, sanded and ready for covering. I have an olive green domestic tissue that closely approximates the color of the SE5a drawings on page 21 of "Flying Colors.
I do have a few corrections to my last post. That piece of 1/4" X 1/4" stock is part of the kit. You are supposed to round it off and make the exhaust stacks. I would have known this right away if I had the instruction booklet. I weighed it and decided to use a piece of thin wall aluminum tubing from my stash. Also, there was an extra piece of 1/16 X 3/32"stock in the kit. It had become separated from the strip stock sheet and was in the box.
There is one thing about this kit, probably familiar to others that have built 200 series models. (I've built a lot of Guillow's kits, but this is my first 200.) A note on the plan suggest that you make strut pockets in the wing by adding strip stock to the sides of the ribs along side the notches for the struts. Strut pockets are a good Idea. However, you might want to notch the strip stock along side the strut notch since the ribs are 1/16" thick and the struts are 3/32". You probably want to deal with this before you have the covering on the wings. Personally, I don't want to sand struts to thin them down to fit. This may be one of those "six of one, half dozen of the other" situations, structurally, but I'd rather not weaken the struts where they go into the wings.
Anyway, I'll continue posting about this one. I'll just fly the Embryo in the contest Sunday. Hope to be trimming this one at the O.F.F.C. meeting next Wednesday.
Keep 'Em Flying!
Howard
(kittyfritters)