I added some more items in the cockpit, but now I must be finished.

I wanted to add the remote control of the throttle and the cables for operation of the Spandaus. I have used 0,2mm nickel silver wire and tried to bend it in the correct form. It doesn't work very easily, but the end effect is enough for me. You don't see much of it, especially of the throttle remote control, but you do see the MG cables. They surface again behind the instrument panel and the magazine box just between the machine guns. Now I need to find where they are connected to and I can finalise this.

After these lines the moment came to connect the control lines for rudder, elevator and ailerons. You could leave the connection in the cockpit itself for the up control of the elevator and for the ailerons out, because nobody is ever going to see them, but decided to do them too:

And then it was just too late or I had done too much. I made the control lines long enough to guide them through the fuselage to the back and through the halves outside, but it is quite fiddly to have these hanging around your cockpit sub-assembly. Especially if you are still working with tiny drops of CA glue on your workbench. Somehow they picked up some CA and became a mess:

The only thing to do is to either cut them off and fix the wires to the back of the cockpit or make new ones. I made new ones, but decided to fix the upper elevator cables to the back of the cockpit, as they cannot be seen at all and because the stabilo doesn't have a hole running through it. It should be at a very small angle to the surface and that cannot be moulded. I considered drilling, but decided against this.
Only thing left were the rigging cables in the cockpit frame:

And I needed another strip for the mixture control. I found a picture where this is more or less shown and it ends in the engine compartment below the throttle strip:

The rigging cables at the front are protected with some canvas. I tried to model that with a small piece of masking tape, but that wasn't a success.
regards,
Ivo