Hello All,
Nice interior work Theuns. You got bit by the Biplane bug too eh ?!
Tony - that collection of XIX's is very nice. Such a gracefull looking A/C - and you've finished them very nicely.
I've made a bit of progress on the Havoc.
Got the Fuselage closed up and the seams mostly sanded. I have to go back with some filler in a few places and then restore some panel line detail.
Next . . . on to the landing gear. And as I've encountered before with assembling fiddley 3-D frame structures - I ran into a few snags. Some help from the instructions would have been nice - but they are rather vague and there are no written recommendations - so I'm writing this to leave a few breadcrumbs on the trail for others who pass this way . . .
This is what I was given. . . looked pretty self explanatory to me.
I assembled the starboard side gear first, and found out right away that I had to drill out the holes in the bottom of the wing because they were too shallow (not "thru holes"). I added the two multi-piece truss parts. At this point I realized that it would help to drill out the pivot points on the 2 main truss assemblies because they weren't big enough to fit the pins from the other parts. Then I started adding the other parts in a way that made the most sense for stability and allignment. More hole enlargement was required on various connection points. The length of some of the pieces seemed to be off a bit (some short, or others long - I don't know which). I got it together and things just looked a bit wonky. The glue hadn't completely set - so I was able to push things into place in a way that looked more alligned. This pulled one piece from its attachment point on the bottom of the wing, but the whole assembly was stable and looked alligned - so I stuck with it.
For the port side gear I thought - "OK, now I know what to do" . . . I pre-drilled all the holes in the bottom of the wing and other points . . .
Made sure to assemble parts D10 and D14 before attaching them to the rest of the assembly as this had given me some difficulty on the starboard side.
OK - things definitely went more smoothly. but I'm winding up with the same short piece. Looks like I'll need to add some reinforcement with styrene strip stock. No big deal, it will be visible, but most people will just think it's a part of the kit.
Now to slip the gear nacelle over the whole assembly to test fit . . .
Hmmmm. Not quite fitting. Feels like something is keeping the nacelle from sliding back over that edge, but I'm almost there. Maybe if I just push it down and back a little b . . . CRUNCH ! . . . it. That didn't sound right !
. . . this was after I straightened it out !
Back to the instructions . . .
Looking at the nacelle . . and the instructions . . . I think I see what went wrong.
A little clarity could have helped here. On which side of that raised lip was the firewall supposed to be glued ? Grrrrrr ! But I dry-fit the parts and it seemed like the backside of the lip was a better fit ! I'm blaming this one on the instructions !
So here I am. Everything looks well alligned. . .
. . . only now I have to perform surgery of some kind so that I can fit the nacelles. I'm thinking that the least damaging method would be to carefully cut out the firewall so I don't crack the nacelle seams, and then install new sheet styrene firewall on the other side of the lip. There's no detail on the firewall. So a plain sheet is just as good as the kit part.
But first I'm gonna take a break . . .
Chris