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gary davies-jones

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Everything posted by gary davies-jones

  1. By the way Chris, love the "profile" piccy. Yours? Always loved this hairy buzzer. Soooo elegant. Gary
  2. Cheers Chris, Good link ordered some today, fingers now crossed that Postmann Pat doesn't look too closely at what he's delivering. Gary
  3. Suppliers of model technics fuels will supply it, but only if ordered by the case ie 6 cans at a time. Chemists no longer seem to be able to supply ether, or almost anything else come to that. nanny state again. ARRRGGGHHHH! We are obviously all to stupid to be trusted with poisons or flamable substances.
  4. A lot of people are recommending highly corrosive cleaning agents (either acid or alkaline). As a metalurgist, I would shy away from anything corrosive as aluminium is almost unique in that it is highly reactive to both acid and base. Really not a good situation considering the limited ammount of meat and the tolerences involved. Thus my choice of acetone as a substnce capable of disolving the oily residue. By the way the polishing with autosol can then be further enhanced with brasso, BUT ONLY EXTERNALLY, just in case any body has a go at the inside. "Well thats what I think anyway." Gary
  5. Hi, Anyone out there know where I can get diesel fuel in or around Swansea? Or come to that just ether will do the job then I can mix my own. Gary
  6. Acetone is my solution. I soak the engine in the stuff for a few hours. It works a treat and doesn't dissolve anything you don't want it to. After a soak a good scrub with an old toothbrush removes the goo easily. 'O' rings do blow up like balloon though, however leave them to "dry" out and they return to their origional dimmensions. The only fly in the ointment is getting hold of the stuff. the chemists will not sell it in more than 50ml bottles for legal reasons. However if you go to a fiberglass supplier they will sell you as much as you need, usually in 5litre cans for about £8 to£10. As a finnishing trick I use Solvol Autosoll and the old toothbrush. When "dry" and dull another old toothbrush brings out a great shine even in between the cooliPlenty of elbow grease and patience will pay dividends in shine. Paper gaskits? I agree, thick manilla envelopes. P.S. Its safe on Mercos by the way. I've done both my marine 61's this way and they stilll run well (as well as any Merco ever did) and they look really good.
  7. A motorcycle breaker near us has sign up states that prices and levels of customer service are liable to fluctuation due to customer attitude. Just a thought doesn't really apply to faceless budget suppliers on t'internet.
  8. Just blown the dust off the box......Its a series2 if that changes anything. Gary
  9. Yes John it was a desmo. Half of a 900SS. Probably why it was so out of balance. Back to locking screws though. I have recently experimented with hotmelt. It used to hold the pints into arrow shafts very effectively, even when pulling them out of taget boss tripod legs, wonder how I found that out. So far no failures, I'll let you know how it works out. Gary
  10. Ha Ha the good old tax payers dollars. I have heard this "too tight to move without tools" quoted about nylocs as well. However Ref my Ducatti:- it still amanged to unscrew Nylocs that had been prviously used once. Still miss that bike. Though not quite sure why. It was vibratory, noisey, drank oil, stopped dead in a light drizzle at the same time as trying to electrocute you, and broke final drive chains on a regular basis. On the upside however it went like a scalded cat, and handled like it was on rails, and of course being Italian looked....well....sexy. But I digress. It probably is true that if you can't move a nut by hand then model engine vibration is highly unlikely to do so. Just one fly in the ointment thought:- how hot to engine mounting bolts get? hot enough to soften the inserts on a nyloc nut? Ohh the negativity! Cries my wife. I just like to be safe, and try avoid problems real or perceived. Gary
  11. True Nyloc nuts are good, HOWEVER, as Alex points out best only used once then replaced, and how many of us are guilty of reusing them? Me Sir! guilty as charged. The other point here is Nylocs are only of use if the fixing is a through hole with sufficient clearence for the nut. Threadloc on the other hand works in blind tapped holes. It will also work on machine screws, AND the much maligned (unfairly I feel) self taper. Mind you I have yet to see a self taper with a decent head (eg hex), and yes I know there are hundreds of Torx headed self tapers in my car holding all sorts of things trim like in place, but these are a bit on the big side for model use. for me it's still studlock/threadlock that wins. Gary
  12. With reference to Alex Whittaker's article on mounting engines, I am surprised he has not made one mention of "thread lock" or "stud lock." This is technically speaking an anaerobic adhesive, that is to say a glue that cures in the absence of oxygen. Used to lock a thread in place it is applied to the thread at the point of final assembly, and when cured helps to prevent the thread from vibrating loose. I was introduced to it by a fellow biker when I had a Ducatti 450 single. Now this beasty vibrated like a .......... well it vibrated a lot, and as a result used to unscrew and shed all sorts of excess weight. On one occasion (the final straw) left me trying to stop a bike with the handlebars in my hands, but not attached to the steering yoke. Now a complete strip down and rebuild with stud lock later it cured it's weight saving habits completely. A cautionary tale here though some of the larger bolts later took the efforts of a 24" (that's 600mm in metric speak, give or take 3/8th's) breaker bar to release. There are two types of thread locking compound out there as well as several manufactures. The two basic types are:- The type that hardens totally, and The type most useful to us modellers that remains slightly less than solid. The later is the one I favour in fixing any small thread as it will release with a little effort, though I would agree whole heartedly with Alex. Use hex headed bolts or set screws as these are far less likely to slip or round than pozidrive or phillips headed items. All of my models are assembled with thread lock, and none so far have suffered any loss of components, and that includes a highly tuned 1/8th scale off road buggy which revs to over 50 000 RPM. In short then the tips are:- Use the semi hardening type. Use hex headed screws. Use only very small drops on each thread. Use only for final permanent installations. Gary Davies-Jones
  13. Diametrically opposed opinions then. Seems there is no middle ground. From what people are saying though it sounds like its a flying tank. Great in one respect, however we want to teach the cadets the land not just arrive without damage. Perhaps we could use it as a follow on trainer before we move on to the spacewalker donted to us along with a lovely unbuilt Edge 540 ARTF. Any suggestion for a bullit proof slow flying airframe?
  14. Thanks Alan (sorry cant spell), I'll have to get the box down from the atic, but I think it does look a bit Cessna 172 like, come to that any generic Cessna really. Thanks again Gary
  15. Allen mate, How do we tell if its a mk1 or a mk2. Ours has foam core wings if that helps? Gary
  16. Hi folks inkit world. I have got my hands on a complete and unstarted HiBoy. Box is a bit (very) dusty and has a couple of small tears but intact. The contents however are pristine and most still bagged. The question is.....is it worth building as a training tool for our air cadets, OR, would it be better to sell it to a collector/vintage flyer and put the money towards a modern airframe? The answer to that question begs two more at least 1. Which modern airframe? 2. How much is the HiBoy worth? It is the four channel version. I'm told it came with or without ailerons? Any answers or advice will be received with much appreciation. Gary. PS sorry for the typos trying to do this on the smartphone....hmmmm.Should have gone to specsavers first
  17. Hi Jon, let us know how you get on, and perhaps we could have an interwing flyin/combat daysome time. PM me if you fancy a go at that. Gary (C.I. Davies-Jones)
  18. Hi Jono, we 215 City of Swansea are flying RTP. Got a feeling Llanelli are also still RTPing not sure about anyone else in the wing. Where are you based? Are you RTPing? Fortunately we are a large squadron (over 120 on the books) and have reasonable resources for this sort of things. I do however agree that the price seems a little high. With two C.I.s as members we can supervise 8 cadets but that cost us over a ton. During the Lees inspection last year we pulled our RTP demo for insurance reasons. One of the inspecting officers was not sure if we were insured as technically the aircraft is not flying as it is tethered and indirectly in contact with the ground. Interesting thought I know, however in this increasingly litigeous society we are taking no chances. Gary
  19. Sorry you had to edit me Tim. In my "Victor Meldrew" mode I forgot this is a family forum. Again appologies for that.   Gary  
  20. Indeed, one name, may or may not be attached to two people.   Gary
  21. Just found all the links on youtube. I hope the law throw the book at him. He deserves to do time. To think if he had made it off the ground and into the air he'd have been sharing airspace with all sorts of legitimate traffic, and with obvious disregard to anything where else might he have ended up. Manchester airport?   I'd like to have a "chat" with him.   My son (16 years old) is about to do his gliding scholarship with the ATC. Seeing this scares me. Imagine the consequeces of gyrocopter meets Grob Vigilant...............! I won't be showing this to my wife. She's worried enough.     Please keep us posted if you here any more abiout the case.Edited By Tim Mackey - Administrator on 22/06/2011 14:12:55
  22. Hi All, I realise That there can be no definative answers on the forum., but thankyou all for taking the time to reply, all opinions are useful.   I think I saw the question posted on the other (inferior) forum in the course of researching this. The manufactureers of the ICD were testing the spektrum transmitters for safety........and no answer had as yet been posted.....unless of course any one has seen a more recent reply. Please let me know if you do.   I have tried asking the medics and technicians, but niether had any experience of RC equipment, but did however concur thatt he outputs are low enough to preclude serious risk. Thinking about it there is a plasma screen TV in the hospitals cardiac unit day room I wonder if they've even thought about it?   I guess I,ll keep looking for a definative answer.   Cheers for now Gary
  23. Hi, here's a tricky one I can't seem to find an answer to on the net.   My Dad has an ICD (sort of implanted defibrilator/pacemaker). Is it safe for him to use a TX?   I was thinking of getting him an RC car for his birthday so could be 27Mhz 40Mhz or 2.4Ghz. Does anybody know if any of these is better or worse, or are they all dangerous or safe?   Many thanks Gary
  24. Looks an amazing place to see CLF, but where is Barton?   Gary
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