Author Topic: Maurice Farman MF7 Longhorn 1/72  (Read 20979 times)

Offline Dagmar Henderickx

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Re: Maurice Farman MF7 Longhorn 1/72
« Reply #15 on: October 20, 2014, 12:11:54 AM »
Truly amazing 1/72 scratch! Looking forward for your next post.

Dagmar

Offline PrzemoL

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Re: Maurice Farman MF7 Longhorn 1/72
« Reply #16 on: October 20, 2014, 07:44:41 AM »
So begins a fantastic build, I am sure. I am looking forward to see it progress, lone.
Ash nazg durbatuluk, ash nazg gimbatul,
Ash nazg thrakatuluk, agh burzum-ishi krimpatul.

Offline radio

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Re: Maurice Farman MF7 Longhorn 1/72
« Reply #17 on: October 20, 2014, 07:50:07 AM »
Like your other builds very great.
Martin

Offline RAGIII

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Re: Maurice Farman MF7 Longhorn 1/72
« Reply #18 on: October 21, 2014, 08:53:04 AM »
Brilliant start, LM!  Looking forward to the next update.
Cheers,
Bud

Agreed! Love the Nacelle!
RAGIII
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"Don't slop it on" Lynda Geisler

Offline Alexis

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Re: Maurice Farman MF7 Longhorn 1/72
« Reply #19 on: October 23, 2014, 10:56:06 AM »
Nice work so far LM .  ;)





Terri
Hurra ! , Ich Leben Noch
Body and life is a vessel we use to travel the planet . Femininity is the gift , The miracle comes from what we do with it .

Offline lone modeller

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Re: Maurice Farman MF7 Longhorn 1/72
« Reply #20 on: October 27, 2014, 09:06:09 AM »
Evening All,

Thank you to all who have commented so far - all of your comments are greatly appreciated even if I do not respond to each of them personally.

I have been working on the engine and finishing the nacelle and now the two are joined and hopefully finished. I trimmed the rear of the nacelle and added a piece of card with an Evergreen strip frame across the rear. On these machines there was a wire mesh at the rear of the fuselage but I cannot represent this accurately and as it is hardly visible I did not worry too much, I just scored the card and painted it grey and left it at that.

The engine block was made from laminated card glued together and shaped. There were two engine blocks which formed a V on the sump and I made a central cover from another piece of thick card. Two covers at the rear were also needed plus two circular discs approx. 9 mm diameter which fit at the front of the engine - photos of the machine in the Oslo museum showed what they look like. The cylinders were made from 60 thou rod glued into a bank and then attached to the top of the engine block. I added various pipes from very thin rod and stretched sprue, plus engine bearers and details as seen on the photos of the machine in Oslo. I made the exhaust pipes from thin rod and a cocktail stick - I chose to model the simpler pattern as on the Norwegian machine, the Paris and Brussels machines have a more complex system which I tried to replicate but gave up! From photos it would seem that some RFC machines had exhausts as per my model - at least I like to think so! When the engine was finished and painted I drilled a hole in the disc at the front so I could insert a pin to help strengthen the joint with the nacelle - another hole was drilled through the card rear and into the fuel tank for this purpose. Then the engine was glued to the rear of the nacelle. Finally I made a frame from Evergreen strip and glued this around the engine, and last of all added the bracing wires to the frame from thin rolled copper wire as they will not be accessible later.





Hopefully the second image shows a little better than previous images the interior of the cockpit in addition to the engine details.

Thanks for looking. 
« Last Edit: July 18, 2017, 06:24:13 PM by lone modeller »

Offline radio

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Re: Maurice Farman MF7 Longhorn 1/72
« Reply #21 on: October 27, 2014, 09:35:52 AM »
I love this LM. Very nice your build.
Martin

Offline uncletony

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Re: Maurice Farman MF7 Longhorn 1/72
« Reply #22 on: October 27, 2014, 11:29:29 AM »
Nice! Another great subject LM.

Offline Old Man

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Re: Maurice Farman MF7 Longhorn 1/72
« Reply #23 on: October 29, 2014, 12:35:43 AM »
Excellent progress, Sir!

That is a beautiful job on the engine.

This is coming along extremely well.

Offline Nigel Jackson

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Re: Maurice Farman MF7 Longhorn 1/72
« Reply #24 on: October 29, 2014, 03:01:40 AM »
A great start LM!

Best wishes
Nigel

Offline Dirigible-Al

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Re: Maurice Farman MF7 Longhorn 1/72
« Reply #25 on: October 30, 2014, 03:47:08 AM »
FANTASTIC!
I heard that it all started when a bloke called Archie Duke shot an ostrich 'cause he was hungry!

Offline Des

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Re: Maurice Farman MF7 Longhorn 1/72
« Reply #26 on: October 30, 2014, 07:28:15 AM »
She is coming together very nicely LM, the engine looks great sitting in place.

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

Offline Alexis

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Re: Maurice Farman MF7 Longhorn 1/72
« Reply #27 on: November 04, 2014, 10:19:19 AM »
Very nice indeed LM ! :)





Terri
Hurra ! , Ich Leben Noch
Body and life is a vessel we use to travel the planet . Femininity is the gift , The miracle comes from what we do with it .

Offline lone modeller

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Re: Maurice Farman MF7 Longhorn 1/72
« Reply #28 on: November 09, 2014, 09:05:22 AM »
Evening All,

Many thanks again for the complimentary remarks that many of you have made. They really are greatly appreciated and help me to continue with this project. I have been a bit slow because I have had a lot of painting to do and have had to wait while it all dries. The bands on the struts took a long time especially as I had to mix the paint and had to get the mix right for two batches as even my patience ran out after I had gone boggle-eyed after painting about half the struts. And there will be more to do later……

The first step was to attach the booms to the wings and tail surfaces:



The front elevator has only been put into the picture to help me to see what the model will eventually look like.

The 4 struts around the fuselage nacelle were fixed with glue first, followed by the two centre struts on the lower horizontal tail surface. While these were still flexible I put blobs of glue into the relevant holes on the top wing and tail assembly and lowered it on to the struts. Most of the struts went straight into the holes, the rest were pushed with a pair of tweezers. Putting glue into the holes means that if a strut does not fit glue is not smeared over the wing surface. Then the whole was jigged and allowed to dry out overnight. Alignment was by Mk 1 eyeball: provided that the jig surfaces are straight it is not difficult to get things to align properly.



I have shown this picture because many people seem to think that complex jigs and tools are needed for successful scratch building and I just want to show that they are not. I model on a very low budget and I cannot afford expensive equipment, and I doubt whether I would get a better result if I did. You just need to think trough carefully each stage, prepare things beforehand and then be systematic and patient. At this stage the assembly required careful handling but was remarkably stable. The outer wing struts were added next, one side at a time, and firmly held in place with a suitable weight while they dried out.



Finally the two forward tail struts were glued into place and I had a structure which I could handle and which was not going to fall apart. This may look weak but really it is not - the struts hold everything in place and the model can be turned and moved easily.



I decided to start to rig some of the struts because there will be a very large number of wires on this model (somewhere in the order of 200 when it is finished) and not all of them are going to be very accessible when all of the struts and undercarriage are in place. So I have rigged parts of the inner wires around the sides and rear of the fuselage and the tail. None of these will be easily damaged later but they are relatively easy to put into place now. All wires are made from rolled copper wire held with CA.







The last image shows that I have added the rear inner wing struts so that I could rig this part of the airframe at this stage as these wires will be very tricky to put in place with boom struts in position. This is about as far as I have got at the moment. The next stage will be to add the remainder of the wing struts and then the boom struts and rudders, after which I can start on the undercarriage.

Thanks for looking.

« Last Edit: July 18, 2017, 06:36:10 PM by lone modeller »

Offline Des

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Re: Maurice Farman MF7 Longhorn 1/72
« Reply #29 on: November 09, 2014, 09:25:26 AM »
Your wing assembly technique is excellent, much like what I do with my scratch builds  :) The wings and tail look great in position and the rigging you have done so far is amazing, amazing because of the small scale and it is intricate, you have done a superb job so far LM.

Des.
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