The Black Sheep Squadron had several Arrow kits in the club stock so it was decided, a few meetings back, to have a "Doughback" contest last Sunday. A Doughback contest is where when a member who buys a kit from club stock shows up at a designated contest with the model built from the kit he gets his money back. Thinking this was a good idea, I bought one, and since the Arrow is also eligible for this year's "G" Challenge I could kill two birds with one stone, so to speak. Unfortunately, I procrastinated, with other projects pending, and managed to get sick the week before the contest and so managed not to get my money back.
Anyway, I did get started on it and since the "G" Challenge runs to October 31, I am not procrastinating with that entry. It does not take too long to build an Arrow so I thought to do an hour by hour report on the build.
I opened the factory sealed kit and examined the contents. It was a die-cut kit. From the style of the catalog included, and confirmed by the date stamp on the back of the decal sheet, the kit probably left the factory in December of 2009. (Kits were usually produced about three months after the decals were printed.) It has wooden, not plastic, wheels, and the wood in the kit was a mixed bag. The 1/20" sheets were about 8 pound stock. The 3/32" sheets were 17 pound per cubic foot oak. Strip wood was about 10 pound stock. On the whole this is not bad, since the Arrow has a lot of wing area, having a few heavy parts in it should not affect the flying much.

I reviewed both sides of the plan to decide on my method of attack before pinning it to my building board. The fuselage width at the motor peg is a bit constricted in this design and many builders widen the back end of the fuselage. My decision was to move the motor peg forward a bit. I started with bending the landing gear wire before pinning the plan to the board. The next task was to free the parts from the sheets. I usually sand the back side of die cut sheets with 225 grit production paper (I use 3M.) until the die-cut lines are quite visible. Usually, this works well and the parts mostly fall from the sheets. This worked well on the 1/20" stock, but required too much effort on the 3/32" sheets and I had to use 120 grit. Even then, enough wood fiber remained in the die cuts that I had to use a hobby knife to free the parts.

So, after the first hour's work I was ready to start building.