In the meantime, I've attached the maintenance hatches, sheet metal fittings, cartridge ejection tubes, and the fuel drain valve to the fuselage bottom.
Nothing has been weathered or aged yet - that will come later in the build.

Originally, I removed almost all of the molded-on maintenance hatches and sheet metal fittings from the model.
These will be represented either with etched parts or using 3D decals, as needed.
I have to admit that I'm now quite enthusiastic about the Quinta 3D decals, though I find their color scheme to be much too light for my taste.
I need them a little darker, a little greener.
Lightly misting the decals with Gunze RLM02 helped me out here.
When peeling them off under warm water, it?s enough to lightly brush over the decal with a stiff brush, and the paint dust sprayed outside the actual decal is gone.
If you don't do that, the RLM02 paint splatter sprayed outside the decal actually sticks to the decal and gets stuck to the model as well.
Then it's almost impossible to get it off.


The quick-release fasteners on the access panels are made from simple 0.3mm Evergreen plastic rods.
To do this, drill a 0.35mm hole, insert the rod, and carefully glue it in place, then cut it off just above the access panel using cutting tweezers and flatten it with a good pair of flat-nose tweezers. Then deburr slightly with sandpaper - that?s the current status as shown in the picture.
Later, the quick-release fasteners will also be painted gray-green..... .
The cartridge ejection tubes are two short, black-burnished 1mm brass tubes, which are inserted so they protrude slightly from the bottom and glued in place on the inside with wood glue.


Thanks to meticulous preparation before painting, the wing-to-fuselage joint now fits perfectly into the fuselage cutout.
I then glued the wing to the fuselage using only very thin superglue, which I applied into the gap between the fuselage and the wing with the help of a scalpel blade.

The metal trim pieces to the left and right of the fuel valve access panel are Quinta 3D decals that have been over-sprayed with a gray-green hue.
These were applied like conventional decals, though I first applied a wafer-thin layer of wood glue to the area where they would be placed using a toothpick.
The glue can then be easily wiped away with the damp cotton swab used to press the 3D decals onto the model's surface.

Servus
Bertl