Saturday, February 20, 2010
In spite of being sick I was able to do a little work here and there. I finished sanding the vertical tail and I attached the edge where the copper wire for the antennae goes. I also worked on the two stands for the forward fuselage bottom. I am not happy with the x-30 foam material. I will have to use some micro to get the gaps and uneven parts right. I am going to finish work on the wire first. The key part of the stands is to make sure that they are level in all three directions. The height off the floor is not as important as the levelness.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
So here is another fine mess. Here you see a close up and a big picture of the vertical tail that I am working on. This material X-30 combines two liquids and the reaction between the two is an expanding foam which hardens like a rock pretty quickly. At first I thought it would be use to attach the blue foam to the ribs. Then I thought it would be a good material to even out the foam and fill in the gaps. Well none of that has worked very well. The foam expands wonderfully. In fact I don't know why the foam isn't used to just fill in the whole section between the ribs. But anyways it does not spread very well at all. I poured it into some holes and it expanded and filled the holes, but spreading it to make a smooth surface just did not work. So I ended up with some very lumpy application which when attempting to sand it down to a smooth surface doesn't work because it just cracks off the foam. You can see on the close up where I tried to create a smooth layup of this material, but it just clumps together like lumpy soup and gets more uneven not less. At this point I am thinking of ripping out the blue foam and using just a dab of X-30 in a few spots. But I don't know yet.
Saturday, February 13, 2010
Last night I started playing with the X-30 foam. The directions were to mix it, apply it, and stuff the blue foam in between the ribs. Well I mixed too much at first. I was not expecting the expansion. Then I tried spreading it on the ribs before it had hardened and it just did not spread very well. I found that it poured pretty good so I made up smaller batches and poured it in the gaps. When I finished some of the the left over expanding cups (you can see them in the picture) hardened incredibly hard. I wonder why you don't just pour it in between the ribs and let it go. Oh well I am just following directions. Notice the two floor bottoms standing up. That is one too many.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
I spent 20 minutes just cutting out the forward fuselage bottom from the layup I had done. The second one because remember the first one was 2 inches too short. As Brian nicely pointed out. I need to more careful all the time. I am now exactly where I was before Christmas. I lost a month and a half. I am not tracking my time I am just trying to work. I was spending too much time finding the right podcast or music and keeping track of the work that I lost a little sight of the goal of eventually flying a plane.
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