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Guillows Series 800 - Stearman PT-17 by biplane guy. Viewed 721 times.
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Image Comments
biplane guy26-Apr-16 20:20
biplane guy26-Apr-16 20:21
For the shocks.
John M Oshust26-Apr-16 21:44
Sweet!
Don C26-Apr-16 21:53
Now that's precise!
poppy27-Apr-16 09:47
Exquisite detail!!
rayl27-Apr-16 09:56
OK, so are they Cast, plastic, magic???
biplane guy27-Apr-16 14:44
Thanks guys. I made these from strips of .020 white styrene about 3/32" wide. I used CA to stick the ends of one pair together and then sandwiched that between another pair at about a 45 degree angle. I then split some short pieces of 1/8" OD x 1/16" ID rigid plastic tubing lengthwise but slightly off center so that the tubing would snap around the 1/16" wire used for the landing strut. I used CA again to connect the open end of the strip assemblies to the sides of the tubing, put a dab of 5 minute epoxy on the joints to simulate the bolts, then painted them. Once they are snapped in place to the actual struts I will CA the other half of the tubing pieces on to complete the assembly.
rayl27-Apr-16 19:00
Fine job.
Skyediamonds198527-Apr-16 21:36
Excellent job, "Mr." biplane. I think the small ridge lines on the edges of the scissors for the shock structs is whats got everyone's attention. You certainly got mine!! Incredible attention to detail. Great to know I'm not alone. That post of your biplane ride in the Waco was great! Glad to hear of your sneaky daughter. Loved the instrument panel. My guess is, you decided to replicate the panel of the PT-17 near your airport? Beautifully done.
Skyediamonds198527-Apr-16 21:59
By the way, those scissor shocks are a lot prettier than mine. I used glossy paper. Pretty much did the same thing of gluing identical "A" frames together to give each scissor some "depth, then using a tiny piece of tubing from a local bead store to serve as a hinge where the two assemblies joined together, then splitting them at the joint of the landing gear. I think I said that right.....
biplane guy28-Apr-16 20:33
I wish I could say that those ridge lines were planned but they were an unexpected detail that actually wasn't even noticeable until the paint was applied. They were the result of the strips being cut with an x-acto knife.
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