With the pulley ports hollowed out, I filled in the undersides and added the pulleys, brackets and cable from various sizes of plastic rod.

I had a devil of a time getting these pieces to fit in the pulley ports and this is at 1/32 scale. Bud and Rob, I have a much better appreciation of your abilities when you're doing it in 1/48 scale. If I see someone doing it in 1/72 scale, I'm going to take up hooking rugs!


With the pulley ports detailed, it was time to shoot the underside colour and when it was dry, I sealed it with Testor's Dullcote. I then masked it off to lay out the demarcation line between it and the topside colour.

I then shot the topside colour and peeled off the masking tape.
It came away perfectly, without any paint lifting at all. This is an important point as you'll see. I sealed everything again with Testor's Glosscoat, added the decals, sealed them with several coats of Dullcote, and ended up with this.

So far so good. I've accomplished two of three goals in this build. And then the model started going into a spin. Moving on to trying my hand at pastel rib shading as Bud has done so successfully in his builds, I started to lay out the mini-ribs and spars on the underside of the wings. I wanted to adjust some of the tape and when doing so, I encountered a disaster with areas of paint and sealer lifting right down to the plastic. I gently pulled up all of the tape at this point as it was pretty evident that some repair work was required, and here's what I ended up with.

Arrggghhh! Remember when I wrote above that I masked and pulled off the tape with no paint lifting whatsoever? Now I run into this issue!
Stay tuned as my S.E.5a spins out of control . . .

Cheers,
Chris