Thanks Ken! Great piece of film, and particularly interesting since we have Dan's H-B C.II under construction right now over in Vacuform Kits.

Interesting to see these kits being pushed out of the large tent hangers.
I hope to have an update report posted over the weekend. The oil grain is still drying on the fuselage, and I have started the process of painting the national emblems (early maltese cross on white field) on the top and bottom wings. I am following the technique of masking the field, painting it black, the applying masking tape crosses and then finishing with white. I'm looking forward to seeing how they come out. The black is on, and I will cut the masks tonight and paint the white tomorrow, so maybe I'll have pix for the update. I'm also working on the ailerons.
Since it might be of broader interest, I thought I'd share an issue raised by Steve (Checkers67). Some of the authoritative A-H aircraft books indicate that the mahogany veneer was applied to the wings on the Lloyd with the grain running spanwise, which is the opposite of what I have done. I opted for chordwise based on a discussion of this issue in Peter Plattner's build log for the 1/48 SH Lloyd C.V, which he modified to a WKF-built Series 82 aircraft. The discussion is as follows:
"The direction of woodgrain on the wing was a basic question. As there have been no drawings or other information available, I consulted a lot of my friends associated to WWI aviation and even building replicas in 1:1 scale like Koloman Mayerhofer. In long discussions we came to the conclusion it must have been span-wise for static reasons.
As I found out, much later in an article of a magazine of 1918 about building veneer wings we all have been wrong, it was chord-wise! The reason was, the 3 layer ply was not included in static calculations. Modellers fate, I will not change it on my model."
Being somewhat lazy and in a hurry, I have not bothered checking Peter's sources, I simply accepted his conclusions. Peter's model looks great with the grain spanwise (which he indicates is not accurate), but I think either direction looks fine. It is impossible to tell one way or the other from photos, particularly since these wings were so heavily varnished that the glossy surface results in all kinds of shine and reflection. I will hypothosize that the veneer may have been applied both ways on different series of aircraft built by different manufacturers in different factotries. The aircraft I am modeling was not built by Lloyd, but rather was license-built by WKF, so maybe WKF applied the veneer with the grain chordwise, whilst Lloyd applied it spanwise.

Works for me!
I think this question is somewhat akin to the Voss triplane color conundrum, with no definitive answer and more than one possible option, although far fewer folks probably worry about mahogany wings than Voss's tripe.

Pics soon.
Regards,
Bob