Jump to content
Playing in the Sandbox Group Build Sept 1, 2024 - Jn 1, 2025

"Very nice sandy beach ... but the sea is really far !". French Aeronavale (Navy) Potez 25 TOE. 1934 "Pink Cruise"


Recommended Posts

Some really exceptional work there Hubert. 

I don't know any of you thread those turnbuckles. Just the thought of it makes my eyes hurt. 

I guess we'll have to add zoologist to your many titles. 

Carl 

  • Like 1
  • Haha 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

49 minutes ago, BlrwestSiR said:

Some really exceptional work there Hubert. 

I don't know any of you thread those turnbuckles. Just the thought of it makes my eyes hurt. 

I guess we'll have to add zoologist to your many titles. 

Carl 

You just need a good Optivisor, Carl, the one where you can change the lenses. As I have had a bad eye for the last 25 years, following a failed laser operation, I have lost some stereoscopic vision since then, which does not really help to judge the depth when presenting the monofilament to the tube opening.

But, with the maximum magnification lens, and a steady hand - I don’t drink coffee, btw - anybody can do it. Of course, monofilament has the benefit of some rigidity. I just would not try with EZ-line.

Hubert

  • Like 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've been wearing corrective eyewear since I was 3 1/2.  On top of myopia, I have a bad astigmatism so my prescription is -13 Power for my right eye and -14 for my left.  I had ICL surgery about 6 years ago and that was amazing. 

I should really looking into something like an Optivisor. Readers have worked for me at the bench but I don't tend to get detailed with the painting like some members do. 

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I rig my WW1 planes the same way like Hubert. EZ-Line is too wobbly for that method, but monofilament works relatively trouble free, due to it´s rigidity. Some areas which were harder to reach during my AEG G.IV build (between nacelles and fuselage) were rigged with elastic thread from Infini (0,135mm), which is also threadable. 
If you make your own turnbuckles from brass or aluminum tube (I prefer aluminum, as there is no need for painting), cut the tube with a sharp blade, while rolling it onto a cutting mat and you minimize the burr. I additionally clean the holes of the cut tubes with a drill bit, which makes threading easier.

Cheers Rob

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

A small hop for modelling, but a big leap for Potez ... she's grown wings

 

Limited progress this week. I had to have a quick trip to France, which put modelling on the back burner. But I am now officially retired, including as a company owner :) . I signed the sale of the company, and to boot, I sold it to the man who seconded me throughout all the years, which makes me even happier to see the sale come to fruition, because he truly deserved it.

Ok, back to the Potez. I did do the small touchups of the right fishhook / anchor on the top wing after the near disaster of laying the decal, then sealed all the decals with a coat of Tamiya X-22. When this was done, I proceeded to do some more highlighting / weathering / sand-dusting of the Potez, before sealing the whole again, this time under a coat of MRP semi-matte. I'm not 100 % sure about this one, as I feel the effects I had built up seemed to have vanished a bit under the last coat of varnish.

To do the weathering / highlighting, I sprayed a slightly lighter shade of grey - that makes only 3, or 4 if you count the wheels, in total, not 50 ;) - on the ribs of the top surfaces, as on the top fuselage.

I then used blue-grey and light brown pastel chalks to further enhance the highlighting, rubbing the grey chalk on the upper surfaces (the ribs and the top fuselage), and the sand chalk on the lower surfaces, and then blending it in the surface with a stiff flat brush. I also added some sand chalk on the lower part of the rudder, who most likely was receiving the dust generated by the landings and take-offs on the sand "runways".

Anyway, on to the pics :

The fuselage, with the rudder and elevators :

KODAK Digital Still Camera

You may note the lower part of the "BZ65" number is slightly yellowed by the desert sand as well ...

KODAK Digital Still Camera

... as is the belly and underside, where the effect is heavier, logically :

KODAK Digital Still Camera

The lower sesquiplane wing and undersurfaces of the elevators, before the application of the semi-mette varnish :

KODAK Digital Still Camera

The upper wing with the highlighted ribs :

KODAK Digital Still Camera KODAK Digital Still Camera

This one below is slightly out of focus nearer to the camera, but it also shows the starkness of the roundels and fishhooks has been toned down and blended into the general dusting effect (ditto for the lower wings, btw)

KODAK Digital Still Camera

And then came the time to glue the lower sesquiplane. The tube spars I had added worked as planned :piliot:

KODAK Digital Still Camera

And I knew there was a reason I kept these Humbrol tins for 35 years 🤣

KODAK Digital Still Camera

The top wing is just posed on the upper cabane struts jig :

KODAK Digital Still Camera

... But it proves the landing gear is strong enough to withstand the weight of the Potez kit. The loaded weight of the Potez 25 TOE was about 2 500 Kg, which should result in a 1/32 scale weight of about 76 grams ... The kit is about 4.5 times heavier than that ...

KODAK Digital Still Camera

... and the one above shows the modulation and highlighting I did much better.

I have also worked on the windmilling generators. Lukgraph proposes some "propeller blades" on the PE sheet for those, but I am struggling to understand the fitting of these asymetric shapes, one blade being "fat" when the other is definitely "slim". So I put to a better use the PE "turnbuckles" supplied by Lukgraph converting them to emulate the windmilling wings. A bit of filing and twisting, et voilà !

KODAK Digital Still Camera

 

KODAK Digital Still Camera

I will now let the 5-minute epoxy of the lower sequiplane cure overnight before moving on to the upper wing. But before that, before the upper wing makes handling the Potez a perilous exercise, I will have to find the way of affixing the spare wheel on the left side of the aircraft ...

TTFN

Hubert

  • Like 4
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 minutes ago, KevinM said:

First of congratulations upon retirement Hubert!Second the effect of weathering and attention to details is paying off Sir looks really Nice!The dio should really cool.:unworthy:

Thank you Kevin. I retired on July 1st 2022, but still owned the company, although I nominated my right-hand as General Manager since October 22. 
He is now a full owner, and me a full retiree.

As for the Potez, I am now on the home stretch. I should start the rigging on Tuesday, and hopefully finish it by next week-end.

Hubert

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Congrats on the full retirement and the successful handoff of your company into good hands. That's quite an accomplishment!

Beautiful work on the shading, modulation and chalk work.  I've seen the same - especially with chalk - it seems to disappear under a coat of anything.

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Welcome to the full modeling go without excuses anymore, Hubert :D. Congratulations that it was such a seemingly smooth transition. I kind of retired very early and never regretted it and enjoy live full throttle.
The Potez is coming together nicely. I like the subtle but noticeable weathering, which blends everything together. Chalk effects are always a bit of guessing, with clear coats applied on top. For these effect, I use weathering pencils more and more, which fade less under clear coat.

Cheers Rob

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...