1/48 Hasegawa Ki-44-II Ko Wakamatsu's Bird

Started by Woody Kubacki · 35 · 1 year ago
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    Woody Kubacki said 1 year, 7 months ago:

    @tcinla @fiveten @johnb Thank you fellas for the kind words. I was really nervous at how the weathering would turn out on a bare metal finish, but I am happy with it and looking forward to future bare metal planes, especially those in 1/32 (Ki-4/61/84). If I have time I'll post up an article and then start a new thread for my next build tonight.

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    Louis Gardner said 1 year, 7 months ago:

    Woody, @wkubacki
    You have done an incredible job with your Ki-44. It looks very impressive. Thank you for building up another one for our Empire of Japan group. I'm definitely looking forward to seeing your new build journals. Good luck at the show. You should do very well there.

    Years ago I worked as an automotive machinist. I rebuilt / machined a lot of car and various engine parts, but what I did the most of was rebuilding cylinder heads. That was my "specialty".

    Occasionally we would get a Toyota 22R cylinder head in the shop. Most of the time they had a lot of miles on them, and they needed all new valve guides, valves, and springs, followed up with a fresh valve seat cutting.

    Most of the ones that came in only for a resurfacing had been ran while overheating. They would then warp, allowing the head gasket to blow out. One of the things I checked in every cylinder head that was equipped with an overhead camshaft was I checked the head for straightness. This was especially important with aluminum heads.

    Sometimes the head would warp and twist so badly, I had to straighten them back out by placing shims of varying thickness under the ends of the head at the gasket surface, and then bolt the head down to the holding fixture using the center head bolt holes. The thickness of the shim I used depended on just how badly the head was bowed.

    The head would then be placed into an industrial gas fired oven and baked for several hours. This would usually remove the bend, and it straightened them out considerably. It made a big difference, because otherwise the camshaft would wear out the journals it rode on, if this was not tended to during the rebuild. If the head was not straight, then neither were the camshaft journals.

    When I got done with them they were like new and very straight. After straightening, I would resurface them so the head gasket would properly seal. These little 22 R's are virtually indestructible and great engines.

    I'm looking forward to seeing more of your work.

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    Woody Kubacki said 1 year, 7 months ago:

    @lgardner That's very interesting Louis, especially the baking part to straighten the head. I have fixed one 22r blown HG in the older 4Runner, and have a few other spare engines in various conditions. Ideally I would like to put a 20r head on a 22re block to gain some compression and better flow, but even better is to swap in a "newer" Toyota 4 cylinder 3RZ from the 1st generation Tacomas. I'd gain an instant 50hp (probably more since my engines are old and worn out) and more torque and reliability. Im actively looking for one for my 4Runner, to be able to push the larger tires .

    See you in the next thread.

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    Erik Gjørup said 1 year, 7 months ago:

    Such a great job! Patience and time combined with skill has resulted in a really great result.

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    Bill Koppos said 1 year, 7 months ago:

    You can quell some devils with that. That NMF techique is very interesting. I know that feeling , a show deadline approaches...It's actually a good rush.