I'm building wings for a spacecraft -- I'm making these out of styrene. I'm dithering on whether to use styrene sanded to shape or A + B Putty to make the leading edges.
Any ideas?
Leading Edges for Wings
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Leading Edges for Wings
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Generally I find it easier to work the styrene - if your wing is already styrene. It's very uniform, and resiliant to boot. Go slow, wet-sand, and maybe make some contour guides. Or glue sanpaper to the contour guide so you have a perfect shape...
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One of the ideas I have thought about but haven't tried yet is to use the half-round strips available from Evergreen attached to the wings and then sand off excess. Of course, this would not be practical if the wing is quite thinck as for large projects.
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i was recently(ok, so it was ...a year ago... wow...) building a sorta plane like model with stubby wings. i basically ended up using thin styrene bent around a frame for the leading edges, while i puttied the ends to give them an apropriate shape.
this pic is far from final, but give a fair approximation of the effect.
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v21/A ... ship09.jpg
this pic is far from final, but give a fair approximation of the effect.
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v21/A ... ship09.jpg
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This, I did just last week. I had the upper part of the wing which was essentially a .08 thick piece of styrene. What I did was roll the leading edge (which at that point was square) over a piece of sandpaper. You basically drag the piece over the paper while rolling it forward at the same time. I got a pretty nice rounding on it.Spacephrawg wrote:ok but what do you do if you're dealiing with really thin wings?
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are you worried about an airfoil shape to the entire wing? or just leading edges?
the half-round idea is a good one, so is the rolling/sanding method.
if you're looking for an airfoil countour, nothing for it but alot of patient sanding.
the half-round idea is a good one, so is the rolling/sanding method.
if you're looking for an airfoil countour, nothing for it but alot of patient sanding.
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