Where Are We Today
“The Ridge”
Priceville Ontario
Here we are, the Middle of October and
our last week at the Ridge for this year. Patsy from “patsyischillin” has kept
you all update with our daily adventure of life and the fall colours that we
are experiencing this year. All but a few last-minute items have been put away
for the winter before our departure this coming weekend.
My working schedule has come to an
end with many reno’s for happy customers completed.
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Fuselage
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This has been a great summer hobby
related, with many weekends out at my local flying field, The Saugeen Radio
Control Flyers, and starting a new building project. In an earlier post I had
mentioned, the building of a Corsair, sorry to say that I lost interest in that
project and have passed it on to someone else.My new project is a Aeronca Sedan,
which will be finished as a stand off scale model of “The City of Yuma” an
Aeronca Sedan that did a 47 day nonstop endurance flight back in 1949. You can Google it. The aircraft sits high on a pedestal in the city hall of Yuma
Arizona.
Here you can see it on it's pedestal, you can also get on the second floor and stand right in front of prop.
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Built this box to house the fuel tank and make the front end stronger for mounting the engine, not sure if I am liking this, may make changes. |
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Cockpit area
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Back in the day of Model kit
manufacturers, there was a company called Pica that produced a 1/5 stand off
scale kit of the Aeronca Sedan. They are no longer in business, but I was able
to get a set of the plans from this kit. I then had the plans blown up to ¼
scale and found “Katana Aircraft Models” to cut me a short kit. (A short kit is
the formers and ribs, none of the stick or hardware that you would have got
from a manufactures kit.)
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Tail section, large cut out is for one of the servos
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When you buy a manufactured kit, you
get all the parts including the stick and hardware along with the plans and a
instruction book with step by step instructions.
Scratch building is the way I’m
building this model, no instructions. I have never scratch built a model before
so I will admit that I will be stumbling through some of the build. Having
built several kit models before will definitely help me work through the
process. Over the summer, I have made considerable progress on the fuselage, as
shown in these pictures. Now that we will be heading to Arizona in a week, the
building will have to wait until next spring.
Thanks for stopping by, until the
next time, take care. Comments are always welcome.