ZM have very tight tolerances and it takes very little to have something not quite in the right position to give this problem. It could be as little as the thickness of the paint.Love it!
I do not want to read too much into your pics Barry, but I think your last two posts illustrate what I think (I've only built 2 kits from ZM so not enough data) is a major flaw with their designs.
In the earlier pic you have fitted the engines, and used rather beefy clamps to hold them in place. Only to find that when applying the cowls they do not mate up with other sheet-metal parts. On my only ZM radial build I had that problem. I surmises that my engine was not mounted exactly correctly, or that the braces the engine bolts to was not exactly right. But in those stages there's no way to know, until you try to fit the covers, which cannot be done via dry-fitting if you are holding 8-10 bits by hand.
Similar but different issue with my inline water-cooled build but this time it was the wing-roots and their covers that did not mate up exactly. Nothing that cannot be fixed as you said, but took a little of the shine off the kit for me. Not sure what I'd say they should do to fix it, maybe offer some blueprints with double-decimal measurements so the builder can be sure not to encounter problems later?
'Tis the season, on and off the bench. Glad you found some time to post progress. Looking forward to your paint treatment!Doing various 'odd jobs
HI Barry love your work on this plane an that gun barrel will look real very well done sir an ive been followin along on your buildSlow gong at the moment. Doing various 'odd jobs'. Some pictures of a few
Some more work to the u/c View attachment 151458
The nose guns and landing light fixed into place. View attachment 151459
I used AK metallic pens for the chrome.
I used a brass rod to replace the broken gin barrel.
View attachment 151460
It won't be long before I start the painting. It's going to be a challenge.
Good call using Evergreen on the knob detailing. I would have done the same. For all round ones thick wood glue works great too.For things like throttle levers there's a catch-22 though. The PE is too thin to have a "knob" on the end, I have seen it where the manufacturer wants a triple thick (double folded to sandwich the center) bit on the end but there's alignment issues and seams created by this method. Similar but different with the plastic ones, they nail the knob part, but the shaft of the lever is never thin enough, even in 1/32. What I do to get around these problems is use the PE for the lever and make by own knobs from evergreen.
View attachment 149226
They describe it as a 'fuel cooler' Edbert.Oh no, don't break the Gin barrel!!
Just giving you crap, I hate Gin anyway, love the work you're doing.
I suspect ZM's instructions tell you, what is the small gadget on the under-wing near the starboard engine nacelle? I'm working on a Ki-61 and it has one of those doomahickeys too.
Thanks!They describe it as a 'fuel cooler' Edbert.
The warmer the fuel is, the fewer molecules of it will go into a cylinder for a given volume of fuel being let into it. That means there's less fuel to actually burn compared to cooler fuel, leading to reduced performance. It's the same reason for air coolers on high-performance engines, though I suspect less useful overall.'fuel cooler'
Not too long to go hard but you need to leave it longer to cure, at least 24 hours but it depends on humidity.AN HI Again Barry could you tell me how long that vallejo plastic putty take to go hard please
chrisb
OK Barry many thanks for your replyNot too long to go hard but you need to leave it longer to cure, at least 24 hours but it depends on humidity.
One of few advantages of my garage-spraying I guess. The heat makes early mornings my best chance during July/August, unless I'm in for a short session at least.I cannot spray today due to high winds so cannot open the window.
BRILLIANT modeling Barry how that has turned out it would give me a pause for a deciseion wheather to attempt that but you sir have done it i doff my cap to you sirI masked up for the white bands checking the spacing with the decals.
View attachment 152434
The wing were easy enough as I had panel lines in convenient places. For the fuselage I had to get a good base line with some thin tape before measuring the width and using masking tape as spacers and it was then just a matter of lay down another thin masking tape against the spacers, then removing them. Easy peasy.
Below the white band painted
View attachment 152435
Then it's the turn of the yellow i d bands for which there are no panel lines to use so it had to be done by eye.
View attachment 152436
I cannot spray today due to high winds so cannot open the window. I will started a sand primer which will form a good base for the yellow.