Recently, I revisited the remains of My Little Gal II as one of the guys was asking how I mounted the control boxes on the wings of a Freewing P-51 and I remembered I hadn't removed anything from her wing. So, I dragged it out and took a couple of pictures to post. I got looking at the wing and it really was in good shape, a couple of minor wrinkles, easily repairable. I thought to myself, "Good, I have a spare pare of wings for Old Crow."
I got to thinking about it at work one day and decided to get the fuselage out of the death box and have a good look at it as well. I realized that my upset with the accident stemmed primarily on the damage to the Flite Metal (Lots of wrinkles) but upon closer inspection, I realized that one of the contributing factors to the minimal damage was, in fact, the Flite Metal.
So, Having nothing to lose, I decided to make a project out of her.
First, a little history on My Little Gal II:
My Little Gal I was one of the last Iron Ass Freewing P-51's as Motion was clearing them out, the price was good and I bought one. She was a pretty little plane and I used her for the first 'riveting' job I'd ever done, turned out great.



But, unfortunately, she augured in after a perfect maiden, had a faulty landing gear sequencer the autopsy showed.
So, not to be outdone by something so trivial as a new fuse and set of wings, I ordered them in and decided that with MLG II, I was going all out and putting Flite Metal on her. Building a little jewel.


She had a lot of fans! I took her to Nefi and had Captain Mike Maiden her for me as, with all the work I had in her, it was and remains the only airplane I own that I didn't personally maiden.
The doo doo hit the fan one day and she just went straight into the ground, almost like her sister did. I was so disgusted that I brought the pieces home and put them in a parts box and there she sat for over a year.
In the meantime, I robbed pieces like a retract off her for Old Crow, gear doors, that sort of thing and somewhere along the line I've misplaced the hatch cover, but its here somewhere.
So today, I took a deep breath and started in on her.
First thing, remove the Flite Metal from the cockpit forward as the rest was in fine shape:




Once the Flite Metal was off, I noticed a crack on the starboard side
Causing the nose to dimple in a bit

So, the plan was to open the crack up slightly to get glue into it, then push from the inside to straightened the dimple out, then run three skewer sticks into the fuse to hold it in place.
Afterwards, I added a balsa 'plate' to the inside of the fuse where the dimple was, using 5 minute Epoxy and two screws to hold it in place. As I couldn't get to the screw heads, I ran them all the way in and covered them with Epoxy and just pushed them into the foam to act as anchors.
Lastly, I MacGivered up a rig to hold it in place to let everything dry up. It makes me think of resetting a broken bone.


So far so good. I'll let it set for a few days and will probably get to more near the end of the week. My plan is to trim the skewers down to match the surface, then, if all looks good, fill in all the wrinkles with Foam Filler, sand and then recover it with Flite Metal, which I still have enough left over to do. Then make a list of what I need and search it out.
Grossman56
I got to thinking about it at work one day and decided to get the fuselage out of the death box and have a good look at it as well. I realized that my upset with the accident stemmed primarily on the damage to the Flite Metal (Lots of wrinkles) but upon closer inspection, I realized that one of the contributing factors to the minimal damage was, in fact, the Flite Metal.
So, Having nothing to lose, I decided to make a project out of her.
First, a little history on My Little Gal II:
My Little Gal I was one of the last Iron Ass Freewing P-51's as Motion was clearing them out, the price was good and I bought one. She was a pretty little plane and I used her for the first 'riveting' job I'd ever done, turned out great.
But, unfortunately, she augured in after a perfect maiden, had a faulty landing gear sequencer the autopsy showed.
So, not to be outdone by something so trivial as a new fuse and set of wings, I ordered them in and decided that with MLG II, I was going all out and putting Flite Metal on her. Building a little jewel.
She had a lot of fans! I took her to Nefi and had Captain Mike Maiden her for me as, with all the work I had in her, it was and remains the only airplane I own that I didn't personally maiden.
The doo doo hit the fan one day and she just went straight into the ground, almost like her sister did. I was so disgusted that I brought the pieces home and put them in a parts box and there she sat for over a year.
In the meantime, I robbed pieces like a retract off her for Old Crow, gear doors, that sort of thing and somewhere along the line I've misplaced the hatch cover, but its here somewhere.
So today, I took a deep breath and started in on her.
First thing, remove the Flite Metal from the cockpit forward as the rest was in fine shape:
Once the Flite Metal was off, I noticed a crack on the starboard side
Causing the nose to dimple in a bit
So, the plan was to open the crack up slightly to get glue into it, then push from the inside to straightened the dimple out, then run three skewer sticks into the fuse to hold it in place.
Afterwards, I added a balsa 'plate' to the inside of the fuse where the dimple was, using 5 minute Epoxy and two screws to hold it in place. As I couldn't get to the screw heads, I ran them all the way in and covered them with Epoxy and just pushed them into the foam to act as anchors.
Lastly, I MacGivered up a rig to hold it in place to let everything dry up. It makes me think of resetting a broken bone.
So far so good. I'll let it set for a few days and will probably get to more near the end of the week. My plan is to trim the skewers down to match the surface, then, if all looks good, fill in all the wrinkles with Foam Filler, sand and then recover it with Flite Metal, which I still have enough left over to do. Then make a list of what I need and search it out.
Grossman56







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