Thank you
I am not going OTT with extra detailing on this one as it will be all closed up, cowling panels on etc.
A couple of questions to those who have built this model:
Internal cockpit rigging - especially aileron control lines. The little pulleys are fitted to each fuselage half, yet link to the central control stick. Now I am no keyhole surgeon, so I would struggle to attach the lines once both fuselage halves are buttoned up! I plan to assemble everything as far as I can to the starboard half, then loosely attach the port half using tape as a hinge along the bottom edge. then I should hopefully have enough room to rig up the aileron control lines (using elastic for stretch) prior to closing up properly. I plan to drill through where the wing root sits so I can pull through this rigging which is then hidden when the wings go on. What did everyone else do with those lines?
There are some semi-circular depressions on the edges of the fuselage halves - are these ejector pin marks? they are just visible on the bottom fuselage edge if you look closely at the first pic zoomed in. When joined up, this gives the impression of thin slots along the join. I guess the holes I see are for drainage, but these "slots" look wrong to me? Shouldn't be an issue to fill these depressions if that is correct?
While I'm definately not the most knowledgable person around I will try to give my answers to your questions

Please don't take them as absolute truth

1) Alieron control cables - the only way to have them tightened is to drill holes thru the fuselage or...to just ignore them, they will be hardly visible and actually the only one knowing that they are missing will be you! Ofcourse we all do very complicate things for parts that only we know that are there

I suppose this is part of the hobby
2) If you mean the small holes (approx 0,6 mm diameter) along the joint, than yes, they are drainage holes. I think Bertl in his build put some 0,5mm tube into those to make them even more visible. There was one of the Jamo's pics of the Vintage Aviator's Albie, where it was clearly visible that something leaks out thru them and you have to take it in regard when aging the model.
I hope this helps, if not, well, there is so much knowledge on this site that I'm sure, someone will answer them better than me.
best regards,
Sahso