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Heavy Mod - 1/18 21st Century Toys P-47D Razorback


JayW

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Mark - how's this?  protectors for the flap linkages:

 

IbeS2kkl.jpg

 

Truth be told, I only did this after I popped off the innermost flap support rib.  :)

 

Anyway, I did that just before I dug into the tip lights.  Things are moving quickly.  Recall that I cut these out of a lathe turned piece of acrylic:

 

fvCQZUvl.jpg

 

And I wanted it to look like this:

 

kYrEns3l.jpg

 

So I painted the inside two flat surfaces of the acrylic pie slice with yellow zinc chromate, drilled a partial hole and added red (LH) and blue (RH) paint, and bonded the pieces to the wing tips hoping they would stay in place while i went to work sanding and polishing.  And it worked!  Here:

 

Za7No1Bl.jpg

 

Only thing is, the solid acrylic greatly distorts anything inside, so the red lamp looks nothing like it's supposed to, except at certain fleeting angles.  What I like is how the clear surface conformed to the local contour.  It polished up well too with 1500 grit sand paper.

 

Meanwhile, Miss Velma, who has been relegated to a smaller corner of the man cave to make room for the Thunderbolt, needed some attention.  Here she is:

 

Ed1bUpel.jpg

 

Any of you remember her from a few years ago?

 

I digress.   As a side project, I have begun the heavy modification of the flaps.  Look at the terrible items I have to work with:

 

HS68c7gl.jpg

 

Job number one is to create some sort of airfoil cross section by grinding/filing/sanding down the nose and raised flat surface:

 

1UpJE3ql.jpg

 

That took some strenuous work.  You will see much more of the flaps soon.

 

The RH aileron is done, even a cute little decal:

 

U27TjlSl.jpg

 

It received lots of drill starts for rivets on its newly sanded leading edge, and a nice paint job.  It is ready for installation onto the wing, and the LH aileron is not far behind.

 

Wing surfaces have been painted a couple of shades of natural metal silver, and the guns are now in place:

 

TCvEZapl.jpg

 

Alot better than what the toy came with.  The guns were a tough modification as I described earlier.

 

With 1/18, you have to make your own decals as you know.  Here are the ones I created for the wings (two sets):

 

 kpPRi5Ml.jpg

 

 

And lastly, I am into the process of using a Maketar mask for the large US stars and bars insignia for the RH lower wing surface which was poorly represented on the toy (the LH upper was fine and I kept it):

 

eCzN33Ol.jpg?1

 

 

LIsTAIKl.jpg?1

 

t3QdP69l.jpg

 

Next post that insignia will be done as well as a bunch of other stuff.  Til then, and Happy Holidays folks! 

 

 

Edited by JayW
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Well I reached a good stopping point, to coincide with holiday visitors.  I finished up the insignia:

 

 AnoGISBl.jpg?1

 

pP52grFl.jpg?1

 

4rMS092l.jpg

 

For those unfamiliar with an insignia stencil process, here is the one I used for the Maketar stencil:

 

1.  Finish the basic wing paint job

2.  Apply the entire stencil, background frame and all.  Use Tamiya tape on the insignia itself to hold it together.

3.  Remove insignia, leaving the frame behind.  Further apply masking.

4.  Paint white.

5.  Re-apply insignia.

6.  Remove the insignia outline, leaving behind the star and bars.

7.  Paint blue

8.  Remove remaining stencil.

 

It worked great, but keeping the insignia stencil parts taped together without shifting was a chore.  You like?

 

Also I finished the RH wing tip to look like the LH one.  Here are a couple of shots of the flap-less P-47:

 

1fr6ybyl.jpg

 

 

S3nPQ6Nl.jpg

 

 

Have a great holiday!

 

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  • 4 weeks later...

Hello master modelers - life got in the way, and my work on the Thunderbolt has been interrupted alot.  But I do have a modest update if for no other reason than to let you know I am alive.  So on the wing, the flaps are next up.  Something has to attach to these links:

 

  1fr6ybyl.jpg

 

Recall I had started on the flaps a while ago, attempting to salvage the existing parts:

 

1UpJE3ql.jpg

 

And I still might.  But to get the spans just right, and get the leading edges right with the attach fittings, is going to be a little sloppy.  Besides, scratch building control surfaces or high lift surfaces like flaps, can be great fun.  So that is what I am doing.  If it turns out badly, I will revert to plan "A".  

 

I am at work making skin panels (with many hundred drill starts for rivet patterns), the spar, and quite a few ribs:

 

iVwlK9El.jpg

 

 

These parts will make up the main body of the flap, and are all 0.020 inch thick plastic sheet.  After that is done, I will tackle the more difficult leading edge, with its attach fittings and heavily curved skin panels.  Sorta like the real thing!   You may be wondering "why does he bother with lightening holes?"  Here's why - glue together a thin sided closed box with no way for it to breath, and the plastic skins will soften and sag or otherwise deform due to the fumes from the glue.  I found that out the hard way on Miss Velma a few years ago, where I completed a flap box only to see it deformed overnight.  The holes really solve that problem.  

 

Here is a shot at the mostly complete main body:

 

UVNrwyjl.jpg

 

There are 9 ribs including the end ribs.  I have also put stiffeners in between the ribs (the actual flap has full ribs in those locations too - I didn't want to make that many ribs).  

 

This shows the end ribs:

 

hEDe0H8l.jpg?1

 

They are two layers of 0.01 inch thick plastic sheet, meant to show the hydro-formed stiffening features on the real thing.  Since these ribs are visible, I needed to do that.  Note also I put in some .03 x .03 rod as a stringer, just to split up the bays and minimize any sagging of the skins.  Finally, note the inboard end rib has a heavy (20 deg) cant to it.  The real flap has this too.

 

Next post you should see a completed main body for the RH flap, and perhaps some work on the attach fittings.  My near term goal is to complete those fittings and test fit the flap on the wing.  Hopefully the flap fittings will line up well with the linkage on the wing, and position the flap properly in a flaps down position.  Fun.  Stay tuned!

 

 

 

Edited by JayW
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Jay,

     Glad to see you back at it.  Impressed you are building the ailerons from scratch.  I have a love hate relationship with aluminum.  I love the way it looks, but I hate how easily it detached itself from plastic parts.  What are you using to hold the parts together?

 

Gaz

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Gaz - the ailerons I salvaged from the original parts.  The flaps here are all made of plastic; no metal.  Hopefully when they are done and painted, they will look aluminum!!  Could it be the silver paint you see made the skins look alum?  I use silver paint so I can scribe shapes onto the plastic sheet.  Works great.  Black is bad; cannot see the lines on scales and protractors.  

 

And I agree - bonding aluminum and plastic (with epoxy) sucks.  

Edited by JayW
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