1/18 scale Jukka Tervamäki Engineering JT-9T autogyro scratchbuildHaving
tried my (suicidal) virgin 40 minutes flight experience with a friend's
homemade autogyro during my summer holidays with him on flight controls
and me on the passenger's backseat, I can surely say that you really
feel like a bird, sensing even the slightest airwave or gravity
accelerating change straight in your floating stomach. As soon as I
safely stepped on solid ground again and returned back home in one
piece, I felt the iresistable temptation to try a 1/18 scale autogyro
scratchbuild. The following article is to describe step by step the 1/18
scale Jukka Tervamäki Engineering JT-9T autogyro, designed by Mr. Jukka
Tervamäki and currently flying by ultralight aviators around the world
keeping the
Mad Max II GyroCaptain's (aka Road Warrior) spirit alive!
In
the photo below, Mr. Jukka Tervamäki, with his latest (at that time)
creation of the JT-5, which was a predecessor of JT-9, which I'll try to
represent in scale.
The
basic JT-9 autogyro concept is about a tractor gyro design with good
aesthetics and performance with fairly low power. A 1.7 m diameter
2-blades propeller is powered by HKS 700 or Hexadyne Aviation P60 diesel
engines, both delivering about of 65 hp at 2400 rpm. The fuselage of
the JT-9 is of normal steel tube construction covered with dacron
fabric. On the other hand, the JT-9B model is equipped with an electric
motor instead of a diesel engine, with only difference the 3-blades
propeller and wider front cover to house the battery packs onto both
sides of the fuselage. The model I'll try to build in 1/18 scale, is the
two-seat trainer (as for the "T") JT-9T model, equiped with diesel
engine & 2-blades propeller made by carbon fibers. Having the basic
blueprint line diagrams in hand, it was easy to convert them into 1/18
scale with a photocopier and I began the scale model building, starting
from zero using 0.25mm styrene card and plastic sprue. To make the
construction look more interesting, I decide to build the model in a way
that airframe should look like cutaway side opened and let cockpit
detail be easily observed.
In the following pictures, the real (one-seat) Alex's autogyro JT-9, during the successive stages of building.