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HubertB

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Everything posted by HubertB

  1. 50 ? Happy entry in your 6th decade, my old friend 😇 ! Hubert
  2. No way ! Hubert
  3. This chain is really a scale rendition of the 1:1 prototype. Well done, Rob 👍 ! Hubert
  4. Nice start to an interesting project. One comment I could not help but make to myself : I am not sure the fountain as positioned would not be a hindrance to a vehicle turning onto - or out of - the bridge … Just my Hubert
  5. As a precaution, I’ll add a bit of weight in the nose in mine, before inserting the cockpit, nose gear bay, and joining it to the main fuselage, methink … Hubert
  6. Hey Ron, where are you going tu put that gun ? Hubert
  7. Great start Jeff ! Truck models certainly have a presence to them, and I’m sur this one will be no exception … Hubert
  8. Damn ! Me and my big mouth 🫢 ! You’re right Martin, and I should have checked references before pretending to be an aeodynamics expert 🤣🤪😂 ! Hubert 🤐
  9. Keep on trucking Jeff ! Hubert
  10. The angle of the canards with its high dihedral looks weird to my eye, and make the canards of dubious aerodynamic function IMHO, even if this is a what-if model … But the whole is great 👍 ! Hubert
  11. Now, it’s looking like a Cutlass 👌 ! Hubert
  12. Looking good Peter, although, if it is a yard office at the age of steam, one could argue for even more soot. I have in mind the images of the soot the fuel-burning US Navy supercarriers were depositing on everything, including the Tomcats and Intruders on deck. coal-burning locos would do the same in a yard, IMHO. Hubert
  13. One comment about another « oopsie » (from you this time, I am afraid) : the front LG shaft is not perpendicular to the fuselage line, but to the ground … Hubert
  14. C’mon Rob, you cannot resist a 330SL Uhlenhaut. The epitome of car sexiness, with the 250 GTO, the Ferrari Daytona and the Miura. You know you WANT one 😇 ! Hubert PS : and I forgot the sexiest of all, even by admission of the Commendatore : the E-Type Coupé !
  15. The Napier Sabre was a most incredible piece of engineering : 24 cylinders in H configuration, with sleeve valves … Hubert
  16. Kudos to you Peter. I love ship modelling, but 1/350 is just too small for me. My go-to scale for ships is 1/200. But I still remember working on the capstan of a 1/600 Mauretania 🤪 ! Still, I’ll be watching with great interest Hubert
  17. You use both actually. Vacuum chamber to « foam out » the biggest bubbles. But, once mixed, the resin has a limited pot life before setting, so the vacuum time is limited. A pressure pot will push the remaining bubbles in the resin, and shrink them in the same time. This way, the surface of the resin parts look smooth. If you kept on vacuuming the parts during the setting time, the bubbles could foam to the surface, depending on the orientation of the part in the mold. Hubert PS: the artisanal way of degassing the resin mixture without a vacuum chamber is to pour from high and slowly: the thin flow of resin will degas (partly) while flowing down.
  18. Although I have just dry-fitted this area myself, I noticed the same issue on mine. So it’s a design flaw of the kit. As for bubbles, they are systematic with resin. They come from mixing the two components that make the resin. In cottage-style resin products they’d very often appear on the surface of the parts. To avoid this, the pros like Fisher pressurise the parts when setting. This way, the bubbles are shrunk and pushed inside the resin. But they are still there, and it’s always better not to have to sand a resin part … Hubert
  19. That’s called « being caught by surprise » … Hubert
  20. This is looking great, Martin ! It may be a parallax effect of the photography, but the guns of the turrets seem to be shooting on a diverging path … Hubert
  21. Yes, I found others as well, because I was inrigued. So the two outside protrusions are for the ingnition wires, one for each cylinder. The center one was linked to another device (some kind of coil ?) either on the front, as in Martin's pic, or at the back of the engine, to a similar device. Hubert
  22. Why do we have three spark plug wires exits, for a two-cylinders’ engine ? Enquiring minds want to know ? Hubert
  23. Glad the massage proved successful, Rob 😉🤣 Hbert
  24. Interesting, but a typical « TV show » video. Whilst repeating ad nauseam the same pieces of video, mixing the images of the F7U-1 and F7U-3 when commenting on either the -1 or the -3, it is also taking a totally biased view that there was nothing good in the Cutlass. It was plagued by poor Westinghouse engines, of insufficient thrust. Remember that the Skyray, the Demon, the Skywarrior were also nearly axed because of their inadequate Westinghouse engines, only they could be re-engined with the J-57, when the Cutlass’ airframe could not … It was also let down by its ambitious high-pressure hydraulic system, when manufacturing capacities were not yet able to produce the hardware. But all the issues of the hydraulic system led to improvements which served ALL the next generation airframes to this day. As for the « post-gyration » stall, or inertia coupling, or « Dutch roll », all new high-performance fighters of that time experienced these new aerodynamic phenomena to a higher or lesser degree. It nearly stopped the F-100, before developments ended making it the successful airframe it became. The Cutlass was an agile, and very sturdy aircraft when its engines and hydraulics let it fly long enough, and not a bad airframe at all. Its real design drawback was the inordinately long front landing gear leg, which was not up to the task of withstanding the stress of the carrier landings, and would, after some time, fail and trigger the ejection seat, which was not a « zero-zero » design, to the unfortunate surprise of its pilot. But then the front LG design was the result of the poor engines, and therefore Vought engineers had to increase the take-off incidence angle. Vought tried to bite a big bone at the time, and it proved too much for the contemporary advancement of aircraft industry. But Westinghouse were holding the shovel that dug its grave. Hubert
  25. The first released batch. Anything older than this one, and you’re safe. I would venture that any one in a LHS or online is a « safe » one. If on auction sites, just check the manufacturing date … Hubert
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