Picked this up for under £30 and thought it would be an ideal kit to experiment with a few new things and hopefully learn some new skills. For the price I paid I'd say this is a very impressive kit, there are some very obvious moulding flaws but this is the kind of thing many of us grew up dealing with so no problem.
First up I carved a propeller, never done that before. Then I carved another using parts of the same veneer that had a little tonal variety, this looked much more in keeping with the few British props I have seen. Lastly I downloaded a photo of an original SE5a prop and use my cutting machine to cut the shape out of different shades of card. This was all glued together and whittled just like the other two, I didn't enjoy the process as much. Not sure I like the result much either but it's a promising technique that maybe just needs refining. These are in the order I made them, the card one has since been stained with oils to tone down the contrast a bit. Still don't like it much though.
home made props. Bottom one is from card. by
Richard Williams, on Flickr
Next I performed a bit of surgery on the wing pulley inspection ports. These are solid on the Roden kit with the suggestion that a decal be placed over the top. I cleaned up the inside by running Tamiya extra thin cement down the side to melt all the little burrs my scraping and filing produced. I've never dared chop parts from a kit before but this was fun. I have a little tidying up to do but I think it will be straightforward enough.
Roden SE5a pulley inspection ports cut out. by
Richard Williams, on Flickr
I need to represent this;
SE5a, pulley inspection port by
Richard Williams, on Flickr
Was thinking micro washers could be used to make the pulleys, I have some on order. Making the fittings might be tricky but I'm keen to have a go.
For the windows I was thinking of just building up layers of crystal clear glue, anybody done this or have any suggestions?
Haven't got round to sticking anything together yet, the engine parts look excellent but I'm not going to be displaying it so it will be just stuck together and painted as simply as possible.
Thanks for reading, all advice, comments, criticisms are very welcome. I'm keen to learn!

Richie