guillow plane kit.
guillow plane kit.
Author
Discussion

drivin_me_nuts

Original Poster:

17,949 posts

235 months

Friday 16th August 2013
quotequote all
morning all,


I'm planning to order one of these soon (something from WW2 era). its been some time since I've built anything and my sum totals of tools is zero.


Can you help me please put together a list of tools I might need


cutting mat
scalples
files
sanding papers
tweezers
balsa glue
clips/pins

dope


is there anything else obvious missing?

cheers,

DMN

Eric Mc

124,932 posts

289 months

Friday 16th August 2013
quotequote all
Flying skills?

Scale WW2 era models are actually quite hard to fly. Would you be better off getting one of simpler high wing, non-scale models for starters?

drivin_me_nuts

Original Poster:

17,949 posts

235 months

Friday 16th August 2013
quotequote all
This one is a static one to start with - more for the creative aspects of the hobby. The one after will be a basic flier.

tr7v8

7,554 posts

252 months

Friday 16th August 2013
quotequote all
Personally I'd use aliphatic PVA rather than balsa cement. They are pretty fiddly to build but make a nice job.

dr_gn

16,774 posts

208 months

Friday 16th August 2013
quotequote all
I recently built the Guillows Stearman biplane as a static, uncovered model.

A flat baseboard for sticking pins into through the plan is essential.

Also, if you're building over the plan, encapsulate it in transparent film so that it doesn't stick to the parts.

Sanding sticks are useful, both flexible and rigid.

rhinochopig

17,932 posts

222 months

Friday 16th August 2013
quotequote all
Swear Jar - It'll pay for your next model biggrin

Skodaku

1,805 posts

243 months

Monday 2nd September 2013
quotequote all
dr_gn said:
I recently built the Guillows Stearman biplane as a static, uncovered model.

A flat baseboard for sticking pins into through the plan is essential.

Also, if you're building over the plan, encapsulate it in transparent film so that it doesn't stick to the parts.

Sanding sticks are useful, both flexible and rigid.
Are all the parts pre-cut or is it still the Swan knife and no finger ends ?

dr_gn

16,774 posts

208 months

Monday 2nd September 2013
quotequote all
Skodaku said:
dr_gn said:
I recently built the Guillows Stearman biplane as a static, uncovered model.

A flat baseboard for sticking pins into through the plan is essential.

Also, if you're building over the plan, encapsulate it in transparent film so that it doesn't stick to the parts.

Sanding sticks are useful, both flexible and rigid.
Are all the parts pre-cut or is it still the Swan knife and no finger ends ?
Some are pre-cut (badly), other bits of strip needed cutting to length and shaping by hand. Leading edges for example were square section...

It was fine though, mostly balsa which is easy to work.