Evening All,
Thank you Rick, Alexis, Nigel and Dave for your kind comments - they are much appreciated.
Painting has progressed to the stage where I can now continue with construction. (There are no decorations on this model - the aircraft was devoid of any markings - as typical for the time. Only racing aircraft had numbers - usually on the rudder but sometimes on the fuselage. In this case there was no fuselage...... and Rolls did not use this particular machine for racing). I wanted to represent the wooden parts that were covered in a different shade to those which were exposed, so I used a mix of acrylic white and Revell beige (314) for the ribs and spars and white and Revell Okre (88) for the wooden parts that were normally exposed: the contrast is not strong but as the airframe was made of of ash for the spars, booms and undercarriage and a mixture of ash and spruce for the ribs, the original contrast would not have been strong either. However the exposed wood parts would have been varnished, so I made those a little darker. The fabric surfaces were a mix of acrylic white and Revell beige (314)with even less beige in the mixture than for the wood:





If anyone is wondering what the oddments are in the last image, they are the elevators. Half are represented as fabric covered and the other half will be exposed - only the spar is in place at the moment as I have still to make the ribs. There was a biplane arrangement at the front of the aircraft and a single elevator at the rear. The single booms extending from the wings support the rudders, the double booms the rear elevator.
I have been busy making parts for where the pilot sat: a new seat, (the one shown before on this thread was apparently fitted to French built Flyers, and although Rolls owned one of these - indeed he was killed flying it in July 1910 - it seems most probable that he was flying a Short built machine when he flew across the English Channel), the frame on which the seat was fixed, and the control levers:

The engine is now finished and has been mounted on blocks and a drip tray:


The engine is approximately 2cm long x 2cm high.
I am now ready to mount the top wing and struts and then I can tie off all of the pesky threads which are attached to the solid parts of the wings.
Thanks for looking.
Stephen.