Well... sooner or later it will happen to all of us.
The project has suffered a set back, but it's not a terminal flaw (so far), thank God.
I wanted to reproduce the seam that was on the underside of the fuselage, where the fabric was laced up.
So out came my Waldron punch set. I cut a thin strip from a sheet of plastic, then marked out a series of small lines in 2 MM increments. Next I began punching out a series of .018 holes into it.
and I ended up with this strip, which I then laced thin fishing line through the holes just as the real Fokker had done originally. It looked OK so far, but I wasn't quite happy with the hole spacing. Some were slightly off.
Next I proceeded to glue this contraption on the underside of the fuselage...
Where the glue and affected plastic oozed out of the little holes that I had punched ! The fishing line looked just "kind of" OK to me now...
but it just might look better under a coat of paint... Right ?
WRONG Answer Private !
So off the offending strip came... which was followed by copious amounts of block sanding to remove the pitting into the plastic that the liquid glue had made.
I took it down as much as I dared to. The plastic on the underside of the fuselage started getting pretty darned thin...
and then I heard a "CRACK" noise. (not a good thing to hear when you are holding plastic)
The cracking noise was the upper fuselage rear decking as it split in two !
So out came the glue... and I set the sanding block down...
I don't know what I will do now to replicate the fuselage lacing seam now, but hopefully something will come to mind. Sept 23rd is right around the corner...
So for now the parts are drying (probably done by the time this posting is completed).
I'll end with a positive note:
The wings look pretty good now all in RLM 65... I also assembled the lower landing gear "sub wing"...
As usual, comments are encouraged.