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Post by Deleted on Oct 18, 2021 20:12:32 GMT 12
Yeah it's all right for a kitbash I suppose I'm with Dave, the only word I can muster is stunning!
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Post by harrysone on Oct 19, 2021 5:21:50 GMT 12
Haha thanks Zac, somebody on Britmodeller forum has just sent me design drawings for the whole aero commander series...it turns out I have made a few assumptions here that aren't quite right turns out The Croco model is slightly over-scale, my wings therefore are the span of a 690C with the profile of the shorter 690 B wing ...oh we'll never mind it still looks pretty much like an AC690.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 19, 2021 16:29:21 GMT 12
I dunno, sounds like you need to toss it and start again
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Post by 30sqnatc on Oct 19, 2021 16:47:14 GMT 12
Why are drawings so often assumed to be right and a model wrong. I have seen numerous drawings that show the same aircraft in a variety of sizes and shapes. They can't all be right.
Your model definitely looks like an Aero Commander to me.
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Post by thebrads on Oct 19, 2021 19:37:01 GMT 12
This is a well known set of laws from RC Scale modelling, but I see some relevance. Note 1 & 8 in particular.
Platt's Laws
of Scale Modeling
The following laws have been compiled from observations made over a lifetime of building competition scale models. It will be noticed that, like "Murphy's Law", while formulated for amusement, they are nevertheless true.
Dave Platt
All of the best information on a subject arrives the day the model is completed, and proves conclusively that what you have done is wrong.
You never finish a scale model. You just stop working on it.
Those subjects requiring the greatest number of working channels have the least room for radio gear.
How right it looks matters more than how right it is.
Competitive scale modeling is about replication, not authentication.
Given a choice, judges will believe wrong information over right.
Live by the principle of scarfology. Things disappear from the marketplace, so scarf them up while the scarfing is good.
Experience has demonstrated that the worst 3-views of any subject are the ones that came form the factory. The best were done by some careful modeler who wanted an accurate model and made his 3-view a labor of love.
Never, ever, use color photos in documentation.
The weak link in the RC Scale reliability chain is still - the engine.
A fair model with a good docs-book will outscore an excellent model with a poor docs-book.
Scale RC is a very relaxing hobby – if you can stand the pace.
Big models fly; small models flit.
First, it’s got to fly.
No amount of flying will improve your static score.
It’s a mistake to take a scale model out to fly while you still like it.
Whenever a manufacturer improves his product, usually the old one is much better than the new one.
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Post by harrysone on Oct 20, 2021 8:40:15 GMT 12
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