Oh dear it's a 1/72 Bristol Beveldere
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Thanks Doug, now I can say the last three I'm doing are air scoops. :smiling2:
Yes Jim and I thought it was going to be a weekend build.:tears-of-joy:
Bashing more like it Mick, some moldings need to be reshaped...the belly bulge for instants I thought it was a mold detaching flaw and sanded it down.
Thanks Scottie, unfortunately there's no bling for this.
Hope so Pete after this heavy make over and hope the foundation doesn't crack.:tears-of-joy:
Cheers,
WabbleComment
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Richard. Digressing slightly, I made a couple of scoops for a car I once owned as a cylinder was over heating. The scoops, forward facing, then directed the cooling outer air over the cylinder and my overheating No3 piston problem disappeared. So I guess my aircraft maintenance training worked for me.Comment
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At least Doug you did that with a purpose. Over here some idiots put them on their bonnets for show and add loud exhausts and still the car struggles to accelerate.Richard. Digressing slightly, I made a couple of scoops for a car I once owned as a cylinder was over heating. The scoops, forward facing, then directed the cooling outer air over the cylinder and my overheating No3 piston problem disappeared. So I guess my aircraft maintenance training worked for me.
Cheers,
WabbleComment
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Ahh, you have them too.
I usually describe them as the £500 car with a £2k sound system blasting out - noise!!!Comment
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Ya Doug and they have selectors to choose the noise they want. Japanese car sounding like a throaty V8 engine...how fake can it be? :tears-of-joy:
Thanks Richard, I'm keeping my fingers crossed.
Cheers,
WabbleComment
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Sorry I'm so late to the banana whoop-whoop build party Wabble. I have been looking in and enjoying your scratchy work. I too have had an ancient electric razor grate in the spares box for over 50 years...I never did have a kit I was building, that it could be used on though. maybe someday!!!
I really like the interior and all the little extras you've been adding. This will be a great showpiece when it's finished!!!...Figs for it too???
Prost
AllenLife's to short to be a sheep...Comment
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No worries Allen, still long ways to go. Thanks, in time you'll find a use for it. I'll be going a bit crazy for the cockpit with added instrument panel, cyclic and joystick and foot pedals. Don't have any post WW2 figures.Sorry I'm so late to the banana whoop-whoop build party Wabble. I have been looking in and enjoying your scratchy work. I too have had an ancient electric razor grate in the spares box for over 50 years...I never did have a kit I was building, that it could be used on though. maybe someday!!!
I really like the interior and all the little extras you've been adding. This will be a great showpiece when it's finished!!!...Figs for it too???
Prost
Allen
I'll have to have my eyes checked and head examined if I'm bringing in the monkeys Jim. :smiling6:
At the moment working on the IP.
Cheers,
WabbleComment
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Her ya go Richard. A few helicopter control terms for ya!!
Cyclic - control between the pilots legs. (errr - not the joystick
). Allows the pilot to move the machine left/right/forwards/backwards and any combination in-between!!
Collective lever. Lever to the left of the pilots seat. Moves the controls to make the machine go up/down.
Rudder pedals. Same as any aircraft, yaws the aircraft, (left - right), to allow it to point in a specific direction.
To fly the machine, pilots use all three controls to achieve manoeuvres. (Useless fact. NASA used to, (no idea if it is still the case), insist that all astronauts were helicopter pilots, that is due to the additional control input in flight.) Other than the rudder pedals, the cyclic and collective also have additional switches and buttons to operate radio's, weapons and such just in case the pilot gets bored!Comment

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