Originally posted by jetfool
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These were pull out spring-loaded handles to get up to the cockpit from the wing. The usual way of getting up to the cockpit was to get behind the flap, pull on the closest of the two handles that are flush to the fuselage, and both come out around 90 degrees. You use this as a hand hold then once you are up on the wing, grab onto the next one and you are near the cockpit. Although not used nearly as much, there is one pull out handle on the right fuse if you wanted to get up to the plane that way. I would guess maintenance personnel used the right side handle, but the pilots used the left side, maybe alluding to how people mount a horse to ride.
I used a little piece of wood like a toothpick or somehing, cut it so it fit flush to the depression in the foam, glue it in, and you're done. I bet few rc builders do that. On my larger models for competition. I had these handles springloaded so that when you pulled on them, they came out just like the real thing. I didn't bother with a foamie,but it looks more finished or complete that way, IMHO.
I'll attach a couple pics on my I Wanted Wings P-47 for demonstration. Just thought I'd bring that up for consideration before you start priming and painting.
I did not paint my struts steel color, I just left them the silver color that they came installed on the airplane. I found a few decals from books to copy, cut out, and print. Not the best, but they are what was on the plane. I don't know if Callie has any or she could certainly make some if you have a decal from a book or plastic model sheet that she could blow up and you could stick them on your gear strut.
The "shrinker bars" that I think you are alluding to can be made easily with a 1/16 inch diameter rod and glued or fastened to the back of the strut and ensuring that it doesn't interfere with the operation of the main gear. It was a fascinating subject for me, again showing how marvelous the engineers at Republic were in designing the gear to "shrink" 9 inches to fit in the gear wells on retraction, and "grow" by that same amount on extension so they had the proper prop clearance for landing!
Also, I found a couple of pics from the memory locker on my computer. They are of my 1/6 scale P-47M Lorene that I flew in some competitions around 2005 timeframe before I donated it to the Evergreen Museum In McMinnville, OR. The other pics show detail I scratchuilt into one of the wings for demonstration purposes. Everything, bullets, guns, feeder cassettes, etc., were scratchuilt, with openable breaches where they load the guns on the ground. I think each gun had about 25 parts I had to make and then glue together. On hte photo of the plane landing, you can see that the cowl flaps are open. I made up a servo-operated system to be able to open/close the cowl flaps as needed. On this day as I remember, it was a Very hot June day and I kept them open for the landing, too to help keep the Brison-Sachs 4.5 cu. in gas motor from getting too hot.
Cheers
Davegee




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