Hi. My first time posting here. Please bear with me. Hope this is the right forum to ask/
I'm trying to make a scale dirigible from the early 20th C. I have made the balloon, but am having immense trouble with the fuselage due to the tiny scale. I dont know the precise scale but imagine the inflatable part os 150mm long and the fuselage is 100mm long.
I'm working with stretched plastic sprues. These are approx. 0.5mm thick. Maybe a touch less.
So far – I tape/bluetack the length-wise sprues down on a sheet of glass over a paper plan. I then lay the verticals along and underneath the length and glue them with spots of Tamiya thin cement. Then trim them. One made for each side of the fuselage.
Then I need to put the two sides together and glue sprues across the two sides all along their lengths. This is where it goes wrong. There is no strength. The size of the model means the sides might not match perfectly making it hard to mount them upright held down or held together with card strip rigs during manufacture.
The whole thing is very fiddly. Accuracy and consistency is a problem. And the structure warps, is delicate and everything prone to fall apart.
My process is driving me nuts – and I wonder whether anyone here has some ideas how to approach this project? I'm open to a completely new materials and approach.
I'm trying to make a scale dirigible from the early 20th C. I have made the balloon, but am having immense trouble with the fuselage due to the tiny scale. I dont know the precise scale but imagine the inflatable part os 150mm long and the fuselage is 100mm long.
I'm working with stretched plastic sprues. These are approx. 0.5mm thick. Maybe a touch less.
So far – I tape/bluetack the length-wise sprues down on a sheet of glass over a paper plan. I then lay the verticals along and underneath the length and glue them with spots of Tamiya thin cement. Then trim them. One made for each side of the fuselage.
Then I need to put the two sides together and glue sprues across the two sides all along their lengths. This is where it goes wrong. There is no strength. The size of the model means the sides might not match perfectly making it hard to mount them upright held down or held together with card strip rigs during manufacture.
The whole thing is very fiddly. Accuracy and consistency is a problem. And the structure warps, is delicate and everything prone to fall apart.
My process is driving me nuts – and I wonder whether anyone here has some ideas how to approach this project? I'm open to a completely new materials and approach.