Linen time:

I gave the lower surfaces a couple of coats of Alclad Aqua Gloss and let them cure over night. I am using Aviattic RFC Clear Doped Linen decals cut on the Silhouette. Application was very easy: warm water (with a few drops of dish soap) for 45 seconds to loosen the decal, placed on the gloss surfaced and nestled into place with a flat brush. Once in place, I applied pressure with a folded up bit of paper towel, and worked out any trapped air bubbles with the brush. The only other treatment was a bit of Micro Sol around the hardware fittings to help conform to the irregular surface. The upper center wing piece needed a tiny bit of extra attention due to the unusual shape with the compass mount and additional hardware, but it settled in fine. Really very simple, and the decals couldn't be easier to work with.
That is not so say the process went perfectly smoothly, however... After cutting the first wing separately as a pre-caution (I was nervous about the fit, but my patterns turned out to be fine), I let the cutter run through the rest of the pieces while I stepped away. When I returned to my desk, it seems that the carrier mat, which is tacky and holds the work piece in place, somehow lost its grip on the decal sheet and had the sheet was a bit of a mess. Consequently, I had a handful of pieces that did not cut properly, and a Aviattic sheet that looked like it been through the war. Fortunately, I was able to find enough undamaged space to cut the missing sections, but now had no extra material in case of error. Oh, and speaking of error...
Yes, in an inspired bit of brilliance, I cut the wrong piece, and thus my linen process has resulted in this:

Facepalm.
Well, the upside is an opportunity to show a nice before and after comparison to anyone wondering how much shows through the Aviattic decals:

So, it looks like I will be ordering some more of the very fine Aviattic decals, and I may be on hold for a bit. Sharp eyed viewers may have noticed in the 2nd photo that rotating the cut decal 90° clockwise is very close to the unfinished wing shape, so I
could attempt a salvage operation. I'd need to fill in the hardware indentations which would be along the trailing edge, and the rounded corner is not a perfect match for the wings' curve. Some of that will be over painted by the wrap-around PC10, but I'm guessing that the fudged areas will not be invisible.
Anyway, thanks for checking in; comments, questions and suggestions are welcome.
Chris