by Phugoid » Sun Nov 13, 2011 10:11 am
Cutting out the nosecone
The plastic nosecone on the majority of the Guillows models are not their best feature for a flying model. They are nice from the point of view of being a nice rounded shape etc, and certainly easier than trying to carve a lump of wood to the correct shape for the beginner. BUT they allow little scope to adjust the thrust angle of the propeller, and as you will see later this is vital for successfully trimming the model.
In order to try and use the kit parts and nothing else I have devised a simple compromise to allow us to use the part, but to give us the ability to make some simple thrust adjustments.
I cut my nosecone out from the plastic sheet almost instantly without thinking, therefore the pictures are the nosecone are from a BF109 kit I had in my cupboard, but the same principles apply.
The worst thing that you can do with these moulding is to try and be smart and cut too far up onto the radius where the moulding that we want to keep meets the “flash” that we want to remove. Cut away from the radius, more onto the flash so that your knife does not “ride up”