Here is a quick update. Progress is slower than I expected, partially due to the fact that it is hard to keep my mind focused with the health crisis going on. My other problem is that I tend not to keep my work area very tidy, so sometimes I spend a lot of time looking for something that got lost in the forest. Not really lost, just misplaced. Daniel Boone, the American frontiersman & explorer, was once asked if he had ever been lost. He supposedly replied that he had never been lost, but that he had been a might bewildered for a week. Well, that's me.
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It seems to take a lot longer trying to imagine what the interior of the plane should look like than it would be to replicate a real plane. My first revelation was that I built the wood floor for my cabin upside down. I wanted to add a small well for the pilot's feet and rudder pedals. Well, I attached the back cabin wall upside down. So, I i***t-proofed the floor by making it perfectly flat. I sprayed the floor color on the wood, and then sanded it with fine sand paper until it looked suitably distressed.
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I then added some parts taken from my spare parts, hopefully looking like some black boxes, a flare dispenser with two flares, and a few other things. I also scratchbuilt a fold-down door on the aft cabin wall.
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I did some work on the cabin walls, including the addition of some framework, and some other stuff.
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The photos that I had of the militarized Stinson showed that the throttles, normally located on the center of the instrument panel, were moved to throttle quadrants on each side of the cabin.
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I had some resin B-25 seats in my stash which I used to replace the kit seats.
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I used some spare photoetch to dress up the instrument panel. I also added a small extension on the top of the panel to simulate a glare shield. I dropped some Future into the gauges to simulate the glass. I added rudder pedals to the bottom of the panel, with two of them from old photoetch and two from the kit. I like the way the panel looks, but in retrospect the panel looks very cluttered and busy for a single engine airplane.
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The rod that attaches the control wheels to the panel looked very thick and clunky, so I replaced the rods with something more to scale.
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At some point in all of this "imagineering" I decided that I wanted to add some wingtip position lights so my scale pilots could fly formation at night. Everything was fine until I realized that I didn't have a piece of clear plastic large enough to fill the spot for the lights. A little pre-planning would have been great here. Measure twice, cut once, cuss, then go get some more plastic.
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So I will figure that out soon. I also decided the spats on the landing gear just didn't fit into the rugged use this plane has had, so I am working on coming up with something believable to replace the spats. You might be surprised how few pictures there are of a Stinson without spats (hint: None that I could find). I am getting really close to closing the fuselage up, so the next update should have something looking more plane-like. I am also working on the masters for my homemade decals, so those should be ready soon also.
Everyone stay safe in the trying time. As bad as this is, I keep thinking this is how the zombie apocalypse will strike also.