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Colin Leighfield's Chipmunk build.


Colin Leighfield
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Colin, to make a 91 four stroke sound exactly like a Gipsy, replace the main bearing with a well worn and slightly rusty one. At least that worked for a second hand Magnum 91 Ibought second hand some years ago! replacing the bearings quietened things down and reduced the heat produced but it lost that scale tonecrying

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Colin

I applaud your efforts to 'bury' the silencer and achieve a realistic exhaust note although you might need a pretty large can buried in the fuselage to get it deep enough. smile

You still have the problem that with a single each beat will sound the same whereas the carburation of most Gipsy ensures each cylinder makes a slightly different tone. wink 2

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Went on a helicopter flight last Saturday from Redhill Airport over London and back. We waited at a cafe which is attached to an aircraft hanger which you had to enter to use the Unisex loo. Within the hanger were a number of interesting planes including two Chipmunks. I have forgotten what the blue biplane was?.As for the flight my first in a helicopter it was really excellent and I would recommend it.I am not sure about accommodation if it's required, but could the building I pictured be a 5 star hotel?

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Edited By Mike Etheridge 1 on 15/08/2017 20:33:31

Edited By Mike Etheridge 1 on 15/08/2017 20:35:22

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img_2099.jpgSince we got home last week I've spent time making up the secondary silencer, basing it on the article shown on the plan. I have used 20 swg brass. I thought it was coming along reasonably well until I ran out of silver solder. A visit to B&Q got me some brazing rod that I thought would finish the job. However I found this evening that the melting point of the brazing rod was considerably higher than the silver solder and the light gauge brass was distorting substantially under the sustained heat. It looks as if I need to scrap it and start again, which is a bit of a blow. Also I've proceeded with doping medium weight tissue on top of the lightweight silk on the wings. The method I used was to attach the tissue by doping it on around the edges only, then water shrinking it before applying a further coat of dope overall to adhere it to the silk. it has worked a treat. The result is a very tough and smooth covered surface.

Covering this way is a slow and laborious process, but I don't want to use Solartex because I have seen too many beautifully finished and painted scale models. img_2098.jpgwith the covering sagging in the sun. Although I'm not aiming for a concours finish, I don't like to see that. Sadly, I dropped the wing and it fell straight onto the centre section leading edge, pushing in the wing fixing dowels and damaged the blue foam fairing. Stupidly clumsy, that will take some care in fixing.

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  • 3 years later...

Glad that you put those pics of the fairings and the info about fitting them on there since I still have that hurdle to cross on my 1:5 scale version. Someone said that one of the G whatever number is completely wrong. I shall cut mine from scrap balsa before committing to the real thing.

After much effort and several rethinks I now have the wing bolted in what I think is the correct place but would like to fit the tail using a laser meter since I do not trust my building that much. Since I do not have the flaps fitted I cannot use the meter without firstly covering the wing parts and gluing in those hinges, then of course I need to fit the wing tips first with the flaps/ ailerons correctly aligned.. Lousy plan and a devil to make from it.

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I meant Brian Taylor of course, not Dennis.

Just do not even contemplate this thing. I could not pick up the light weight wing without my fingers going through the sheeting, and those complex bits of thin piano wire and tubing for the hinges etc would be lucky to survive one flight. The fus built in two halves split vertically down the centre turned into a banana. A friend actually completed one (the smaller version) including the u/c as shown on the plan and this collapsed on the first landing.

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I think I’d find that too much of a challenge! The priority now is to finish the Hawker Fury, which I’m confident about, then take a long hard look at the Chipmunk and decide if it’s worth finishing or not, it might be. Don’t think a Brian Taylor (or anyone else’s) Mosquito, much as I love it, would be my first choice for my next serious scale project. Probably something intrinsically slower might be more likely! My horizons will widen when I get my new workshop just in time for Christmas!

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After the effort you’ve put into it Danny that’s a shame but it must have taken a lot of your time, you’ve been unstinting in your support for everyone and I’m certainly grateful. The Chipmunk exposed my own limitations, I complicated it needlessly by experimenting with some different ideas and some aspects of the plan caught me out. I took on the Fury before resolving the remaining dilemmas with the Chipmunk and have taken far too long with that, also diverting limited time to other projects along the way has slowed that down. However I have at last got a lot more time now and I’m in the process of substantially improving my workshop and facilities, so am getting excited about being able to do so much more.
Some of the issues with design detail and plan errors have been frustrating. The latest with the cabane wire detail on my Fury plan is a case in point, I’ve clearly got a plan on which I can now see the error has been identified but not corrected, it shouldn’t have been sold like that. However I’m sorting it out now.
These projects invariably take time and some of us are slower than others. However models are now appearing and it looks as if we will see more completed Furies than Chipmunks. I don’t regret having a go at either in the Master Classes and I’ve certainly learned a lot in the process.

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  • 1 month later...

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