HubertB Posted Tuesday at 05:10 PM Share Posted Tuesday at 05:10 PM My "Sandbox" GB entry is now finished, and I should resume work on other projects, and deal with a few SOD queens waiting for me. The priority is of course to finish the Fisher 1/32 Cutlass. However, I thought I could show a little time-filling project I started when I was waiting for the putty on the wing-slats of the Cutlass to dry. When I saw, this one, I just fetched it in a split-second. It is typically in my area of predilection : off-beat subject, civilian, and resin, to boot. So, Brengun has released kits of the Rutan Quickie in 1/72, 1/48 and 1/32 scale. The Quickie is one of the many amazing brain-children of the creative Burt Rutan, conceived in the mid 70's. It features many of the pet-ideas of Burt Rutan : light weight, canard or staggered wing configuration, amateur construction, inexpensive to build, power, and run. In typical Rutan fashion, the Quickie is powered by a stock Onan engine, probably well known to US owners of houses, as my understanding is this engine was primarily conceived to power small lawn-mowing tractors, delivering between 18 and 22 hp acoording to the versions; On this engine, the Quickie can cruise at some 125+ mph, a testament to the fine aerodynamics and light weight of Rutan products. The Brengun kit is a typical resin kit, in a diminutive box - at least for a 1/32 builder- Inside the box, a few resin parts, a vac-formed canopy, a small PE fret, an acetate film for the IP instruments, and a small decal sheet. About 30 parts overall, so it should be fairly quick, as befits its name ... Unfortunately, the bottom of the fuselage is marred by dozens of those pesky pinholes you find on resin kits which have not been pressure-cast. And you know what the issue is: when you fill and sand some pinholes, you reveal new ones Any way, this is where I stood last Saturday : You can notice on the pics that I have scratched a new back for the instrument panel. Brengun's kit is based on the Quickie built by a gentleman colled Terry Crouch, from Indiana, who received an award by the EAA at Oskosh in 1995 for the quality of his Quickie build. One characteristic of Terry Crouch's Quickie is the overall neat construction, and it shows also on the back of the IP. Check this videao at about 40' to see what I mean Brengun's resin part for the back of the Ip was just not neat enough to emulate Mr Crouch's work so I did a new one. After a first layer of primer, still some pinholes to fill on the bottom fuselage ... But this is where I am at tonight. The seat has been reclad with some Evergreen strips, and painted. An additional layer of blue is needed to blend the colors of the seat. The detail parts have been painted as well The instrument panel has been painted and wired ... You may notice the switches on the left of the PE IP, done with 0.2 mm nickel silbver rod, and inserted in the holes I drilled for them ... The main components have been primed and sanded a few times already, the vacformed canopy cut, trimmed to fit, masked and painted And in the meantime, I have been working on my "Terry Crouch" figure. It is in fact an absolutely fantastic figure from Reedoak, of a "civilian pilot". Here is my current wip of the Quickie pilot. I had great fun painting the Hawaian shirt TBC, and hopefully finished before the year end. Hubert. 9 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JohnB Posted Tuesday at 06:55 PM Share Posted Tuesday at 06:55 PM Wow! What a neat project Hubert. 🙂 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GusMac Posted Tuesday at 09:25 PM Share Posted Tuesday at 09:25 PM Really nice job on the Hawaiian shirt Hubert. Zoomed the photo up just to get the full appreciation. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DocRob Posted Tuesday at 09:43 PM Share Posted Tuesday at 09:43 PM Nothing better than a little side project from time to time, to reignite the mojo flow. I never heard of the Quickie (Quirky), but like it, especially with your careful treatment. The Shirt is fantastic. Cheers Rob 3 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BlrwestSiR Posted Thursday at 11:59 PM Share Posted Thursday at 11:59 PM Really next project there Hubert. When I visited the EAA museum they had a display dedicated to the Rutans and their aircraft. Definitely an out of the box thinker. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Landlubber Mike Posted Friday at 02:34 AM Share Posted Friday at 02:34 AM Wow, fantastic project Hubert! Looking forward to following along! 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HubertB Posted Friday at 04:15 PM Author Share Posted Friday at 04:15 PM A miniature (literally) update. Need glasses ... A small update on the Quickie. Not much to show on the main assembly, as I fill, sand, spray, then re-fill, re)sand then re-spray, then re-re-fill, etc. The orihinal is a very clean and neat airframe, and the kit cannt afford blemishes, especially as there is no weathering to hide the surface defects. So I am trying not to let any of those pass undtected. In the meantime, I work on teeny weeny details to be added. ON the video I posted, at about 40', ther is a view of the fuel gauge. It is an instresting mechanical contraption, and Brengun have totally missed adding it. Mine started as a piec of Albion Alloy 1.2 OD / 1.0 ID tube, that I filed for about its half, across a length of 6 mm. It was painted white outside and partially inside, then I inserted a rod made of strtched transparent sprue, and capped the whole with aScale Hardware 1.2 mm nut, that I file to reduce its height ... A sopics are worth a thousand words : By suinting very hard, you can see the bottom of the transparent tube is slightly yellow (that is the brass tube showing through) whne the top is white. The tank is about 2/3 full with gasoline ... Then on to fitting my "pilot". I could not help but see the glasses Terry Crouch wore during the video. What a great - well no, small, very small - idea to add glasses to my pilot ! After a few trials, this is what I produced bending some 0.2 nickel-silver rod for the frame, and flattened 0.3 mm copper wire for the branches : Have a good look at this one, because it took a ballistic trajectory when I tried to fill the frame with some tinted Micro Kristal Clear ... I hope the one I have redone will not fly off in pursuit of her sibling who ended devoured by the floor monster TTFN Hubert 6 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DocRob Posted Friday at 06:56 PM Share Posted Friday at 06:56 PM Cool Aviators, Hubert, hopefully tinted deep green as they should. Cheers Rob 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
belugawhaleman Posted Saturday at 12:17 AM Share Posted Saturday at 12:17 AM 8 hours ago, HubertB said: A miniature (literally) update. Need glasses ... A small update on the Quickie. Not much to show on the main assembly, as I fill, sand, spray, then re-fill, re)sand then re-spray, then re-re-fill, etc. The orihinal is a very clean and neat airframe, and the kit cannt afford blemishes, especially as there is no weathering to hide the surface defects. So I am trying not to let any of those pass undtected. In the meantime, I work on teeny weeny details to be added. ON the video I posted, at about 40', ther is a view of the fuel gauge. It is an instresting mechanical contraption, and Brengun have totally missed adding it. Mine started as a piec of Albion Alloy 1.2 OD / 1.0 ID tube, that I filed for about its half, across a length of 6 mm. It was painted white outside and partially inside, then I inserted a rod made of strtched transparent sprue, and capped the whole with aScale Hardware 1.2 mm nut, that I file to reduce its height ... A sopics are worth a thousand words : By suinting very hard, you can see the bottom of the transparent tube is slightly yellow (that is the brass tube showing through) whne the top is white. The tank is about 2/3 full with gasoline ... Then on to fitting my "pilot". I could not help but see the glasses Terry Crouch wore during the video. What a great - well no, small, very small - idea to add glasses to my pilot ! After a few trials, this is what I produced bending some 0.2 nickel-silver rod for the frame, and flattened 0.3 mm copper wire for the branches : Have a good look at this one, because it took a ballistic trajectory when I tried to fill the frame with some tinted Micro Kristal Clear ... I hope the one I have redone will not fly off in pursuit of her sibling who ended devoured by the floor monster TTFN Hubert Had to look close to see the frames! Tiny! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KevinM Posted Saturday at 02:22 PM Share Posted Saturday at 02:22 PM It's hard to believe that it could fly Hubert cool little build and yes that shirt looks great. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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