Postby David Jones » February 15th, 2010, 9:02 pm
For the past couple of years a small group of us have been talking about building a large model as a joint project. It was discussed numerous times and then shelved, that is until Alan Greaves took the bull by the horns and decided he was going to invest in a B25 Mitchell. I would build the airframe, he would glass cloth and paint it, and Mike Whitehead would sort out the radio and electronics installations. Alan Cantwell has volunteered his engineering skills as and when they become necessary.
We looked into the possibilities of it last year, taking advice here and there and finally decided on the 118” Zirolli plan, with a laser cut kit, probably by Belair. The plan was ordered first and was given a group mulling over. It was decided at the outset that, as this would be our first really large model, and a twin to boot, that we would keep it simple, erring on the side of practicality and reliability, rather than concentrating too much on scale detail. As long as it looks right in the air, we won’t be too bothered about exact scale detailing. It won’t be entered into any static competitions; we just want a good flier.
I decided to start with the tail feathers and here is where we made the first alterations. We were surprised to see the rudders were operated by one servo via bell cranks, these would be discarded and each rudder and elevator would have its own servo. The wooden hinges and horns would be discarded and replaced by Robart fittings. (More about that later, there has been some change of heart).
The kit was ordered from Belair, followed by a wood pack from SLEC. The first thing about this particular plan is that it is blown up from the smaller version. Belair have cut the kit as per the plan, resulting in non standard size cut outs and notches which, as the build progresses, becomes a bit of a pain to say the least.
So, enough of the drawn out intro’ lets get to the workshop. The fins are a straight forward construction consisting of a frame work of 1/4” thick stern posts with 1/8” ribs and 1/4” square leading edges. Blocks were inserted at the hinge points and where the trailing edge of the tail plane inserts. This is then sheeted with 1/16” balsa, with carved balsa block for the top and bottom tips.
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Attachments
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- B25 002 (Medium) (WinCE).jpg (18.54 KiB) Viewed 22853 times
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- B25 003 (Medium) (WinCE).jpg (16.86 KiB) Viewed 22853 times
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- B25 005 (Medium) (WinCE).jpg (14.81 KiB) Viewed 22853 times
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- B25 013 (Medium) (WinCE).jpg (11.95 KiB) Viewed 22853 times
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- B25 014 (Medium) (WinCE).jpg (13.41 KiB) Viewed 22853 times