Author Topic: WNW Roland CII  (Read 20013 times)

Offline RAGIII

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Re: WNW Roland CII
« Reply #75 on: May 13, 2014, 11:00:14 AM »
Very, very , nice Graham! Spots is an interesting scheme to say the least! I like your prop and the exhaust is superb!
RAGIII
"A man has to know his limitations": Harry Callahan

"Don't slop it on" Lynda Geisler

Offline coyotemagic

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Re: WNW Roland CII
« Reply #76 on: May 13, 2014, 12:13:34 PM »
I love this scheme, Graham, and, as Rick and Bo have pointed out, your prop and exhaust are brilliant.  She's shaping up to be quite the show stopper.
Cheers,
Bud
"All men dream: but not equally. Those who dream in the dark recesses of the night awake in the day to find all was vanity. But the dreamers of day are dangerous men, for they may act their dreams with open eyes, and make it possible." -T. E. Lawrence

Offline jknaus

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Re: WNW Roland CII
« Reply #77 on: May 13, 2014, 08:45:33 PM »
Very nice. I especially like the exhaust. Still following with interest.
James

Offline mgunns

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Re: WNW Roland CII
« Reply #78 on: May 14, 2014, 03:24:37 AM »
Hello Graham:

This has really turned out nice, your obstacles notwithstanding.  It is an interesting scheme, and you have done an exceptional job on it.  Looking forward to seeing how you decide to rig it.

Best

Mark
Mark

We few, we happy few.....

Offline radio

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Re: WNW Roland CII
« Reply #79 on: May 14, 2014, 05:17:21 AM »
Graham it looks so lovely your build.
Martin

Offline Nigel Jackson

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Re: WNW Roland CII
« Reply #80 on: May 14, 2014, 09:05:03 AM »
Isn't this coming along beautifully, Graham? Like lots of others, I think that the prop and particularly the exhaust are really good, but the whole build is looking very classy.

Best wishes
Nigel

Offline GrahamB

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Re: WNW Roland CII
« Reply #81 on: May 15, 2014, 01:27:51 PM »
Hi,

something like near the end now but more accumulation of errors and wrong moves.

I 'distressed' the upper wing surface and tailplane's clean bleached linen with some MIG Rainmarks - but if you try this make sure you have a good acrylic or polyurethane varnish coat. I hadn't done this and when I went to pick up one the upper wings to start preparing it for rigging/attachment to the fuselage it was stuck on the worktop (actually on the kitchen grease-proof paper I use as a barrier)! I hadn't noticed that excess had run off the leading edge and 'melted' the paint (Gunze Mr Hobby acrylic). Another massive DOH!!!! So I had to touch up the underside blue on the leading edge and restore some the rib tapes. Jees.

Before doing any more work I sprayed the fuselage with a near-matt coat (about 3:1 matt/gloss Vallejo Premium) and had attached the exhaust; then removed the window masking.







I had fitted the 0.1 mm 'wire stretchers' to all the attachment points but with shorter ones at the upper and lower wing roots and none at the aileron-control teardrop on the lower wings - here the medium-sized UvR line was inserted after I had drilled out the holes a little more. I'm not quite happy yet about these stretchers/turnbuckles as, although they are getting near-to-scale, they are too flexible. This is OK for nudging them into the right angle but they bend easily. It was easiest to attach the (largest thickness) UvR line to the upper wing root and upper main strut points (3 wires - one is a drag-wire) first. Another problem is that the line does not always sit in line with the stretcher - depending on how the line was held when superglue was applied. I can see the value of slipping some sort of sleeve over this to tidy up things like this. Something for me to practice on somewhere else - not on  model like this. Not trying to tie/wrap them seems to do it but leaves only a tiny point of contact of the line and loop.

Then the upper wings were attached to the fuselage - a tight but excellent fit and the main struts just popped in nicely without any problem (fixed to lower wings first and allowed to set) - excellent WNW stuff as usual.

I've just photographed the model after the main rigging was done but not the aileron control cables - not that you can see much in these shots.

Got to finish the wing rigging now and add remaining bits to fuselage, then try and get the spindly u/c to fit without any wobbly airframe above it. A good candidate for brass replacements here methinks.

Not going to put this anywhere near a competition table as some of the paintwork is too messy but it looks quite smart now.
Cheers,

GrahamB
« Last Edit: May 16, 2014, 11:38:32 AM by GrahamB »

Offline rhallinger

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Re: WNW Roland CII
« Reply #82 on: May 15, 2014, 08:41:00 PM »
Wow, Graham!  I really like what you've done with this. :D  Looking very sharp indeed!  Thanks for sharing the potential pitfalls of this build.  Well done!

Cheers,

Bob

Offline radio

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Re: WNW Roland CII
« Reply #83 on: May 15, 2014, 09:03:05 PM »
Graham it looks so beautiful your work. Watching for the next updates.
Martin

Offline Des

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Re: WNW Roland CII
« Reply #84 on: May 15, 2014, 09:08:22 PM »
Looking absolutely superb Graham, the scheme you have used it very appealing.

Des.
Late Founder of ww1aircraftmodels.com and forum.ww1aircraftmodels.com

Offline coyotemagic

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Re: WNW Roland CII
« Reply #85 on: May 16, 2014, 02:21:34 AM »
Graham, you've taken what could easily have been a rather dull scheme and rendered it dazzling.  Can't wait to see her finished.
Cheers,
Bud
"All men dream: but not equally. Those who dream in the dark recesses of the night awake in the day to find all was vanity. But the dreamers of day are dangerous men, for they may act their dreams with open eyes, and make it possible." -T. E. Lawrence

Offline jknaus

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Re: WNW Roland CII
« Reply #86 on: May 17, 2014, 01:48:30 AM »
Really like it. For such a simple marking it is very eye catching.
JAmes

Offline mgunns

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Re: WNW Roland CII
« Reply #87 on: May 17, 2014, 05:35:33 AM »
Hello Graham:

Kudos and accolades for sticking to it considering some of the difficulties you have encountered.  It is turning out to be an outstanding model.  The scheme is very striking.  They always look better on the model than in the artwork and yours is no exception.  Looking forward to seeing it all complete.

Best

Mark
Mark

We few, we happy few.....

Offline RAGIII

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Re: WNW Roland CII
« Reply #88 on: May 17, 2014, 07:12:11 AM »
Graham, Just another example of how AWESOME this build is! Lovely work on this scheme!!
RAGIII
"A man has to know his limitations": Harry Callahan

"Don't slop it on" Lynda Geisler

Offline GrahamB

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Re: WNW Roland CII
« Reply #89 on: May 17, 2014, 08:38:40 AM »
Hi All,

well it is almost finished and I will post up photos in the Completed thread later today.

The rigging on this aircraft is relatively simple and it is a good one for 'beginners' in this respect - the Sopwith Pup has more wires in its tail assembly than in the Roland! The UvR thread worked very nicely and looks the part. I used the thickest for almost all wires except the aileron controls and claw-brake where the medium thickness came into play. As for the claw brake wire I was not sure how to attach it but decided to drill a hole right through it top to bottom with a very thin bit (smaller than a no. 80). This and both u/c stays were inserted into deepened holes under the fuselage first and then attached - the first just threaded through the brake hole and trimmed underneath. Note that the fuselage insertion for this is just to the rear of the port u/c stay (i.e. not on the midline as one might expect). In the end I'm fairly happy with the rigging although a few line/buckle joins are a bit messy/offset and at some stage I might re-do them - I got better as I went along.

The u/c went on OK but test fitting is needed and all traces of paint and masking fluid (if used in the fuselage holes etc) removed. I had built this as a unit beforehand as per instructions and the model was nice and level. There is still some wobble but this could be cured/minimised if rigid steel wire is used for the u/c stays?

Other things being done include a guard rail for the observer's gun  made from fuse wire - this is an interpolation of WNW's profile of Spotty and hint of a structure in one of the photos of same; observer's mg - not my best effort at rolling the etched barrel - should have annealed it first; trailing aerial beneath fuselage - left as is but some might tart this up as Ray Rimmell did for his Rumpler; anemometer added to port wing on the fifth rib station; windscreen masked with Bare Metal foil and painted (yellow-beige here); the two forward windows attached dropped-down (used two tiny spots of quick-grab Gorilla glue here at the hinge line); two red decal guide stripes on upper wing (mine are too angled - Doh!! again) and a coiled breather/vent for the rear of the radiator header tank.

The model does look very nice now and I'm stoked with the result - my wife and kids think it's an attractive aircraft as well. The paint scheme has worked well, with some reservations but I'll leave off my summary of things until after I've put up some photos but many thanks for the support and appreciation as I've been going along. It really is a very nice friendly site!

Cheers,

GrahamB
« Last Edit: May 17, 2014, 08:45:45 AM by GrahamB »