Thanks for your kind words Dave, I'll try and keep it light hearted and hopefully throw some humor into the mix.
Please don't take this as a "how to" rather a "how I did it" and I would welcome any feedback on what I'm doing and am always open to suggestions as I am convinced there are better ways of doing a lot of the techniques I use.
As I said, the Belair kit was beautifully laser cut and fantastic value for money, however the center cores for the elevators and rudder were M.I.A. An e-mail and a couple of phone calls to Leon at Belair to identify the exact parts missing and the missing parts were with me in less than a week. No muss, no fuss, fantastic customer service. Well done Belair! I will be using you again.
Scale detailing being a great source of enjoyment, although nowhere near competition standard, I just like to do it for my own satisfaction. I therefore decided to start with the instrument panels, just to break myself in and get back into building again after a couple of lazy years of foamies.
I used the Graupner vintage instrument set consisting of plastic bezels and sticky back instruments. Being Graupner, the instruments were printed in German - result!
This saved me my usual route of sourcing photos of the correct instruments on line, sizing them and printing them on photo quality paper.
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I didn't fancy just sticking the instrument to the bezel as this looks fake and too toy like to my eyes, so I drilled and sanded out the part the instrument dial stuck to, leaving just the bezel. This was then attached to the laser cut panel and the whole lot sprayed black.
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Several coats were given to hide the grain and a sheet of white plasticard was placed behind the panel during one of the coats so the over spray would show the exact position of the individual instrument dials. A search for the BU180 on-line provided some excellent information, including instrument placement. Each instrument was then carefully placed in the correct position , aligned and stuck down.
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The magneto switches were fabricated from thin aluminium to the correct outline,
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and placed in position with small washers as the surrounding switch bezel before a final coat of black.
The final stage of detailing was to create the information labels and makers plate on the PC and printed on waterslide paper.
The wording on the information labels is correct (in German
) even though it's too small to read, even with a magnifying glass, but I know it's there!
The plasticard was then overlayed with clear acetate and then the panel. I used strategically placed spots of Copydex to stick it all together so that there was no chance of fogging the acetate.
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The finished item I think looks ok with some 3D depth. A lot better than instrument dials just "stuck on"!
DJ once told me, "you can't see the fine detail when it's flying past at 100 feet." True.... but I know it's there!