So, best wishes for 2023, it's still allowed right?
I skipped a week because I played with Lego technic, which is quite addictive, but it is also an expensive side hobby, even if you get the sets from Marktplaats. Anyway, between visits to the ophthalmologist and such (so tomorrow I can go under the knife and hopefully I will see something normal again) I have done something, although I am not satisfied with everything and I am looking at how I can do that need to improve (it won't be me doing things over again)
So I continued with the wings and made the plates for the flaps, so the flaps turn along here, all photos are mss clearer than the previous sentence.
First the ribs
Then we stick a thin sheet of styrene against it with some overhang, where I already cut the holes
We repeat the same for the second
Now those pictures are there, but not really neat, so we will demolish and replace them as soon as I have prepared the installation of the flap control.
The flap control is hidden in the protruding point at the rear of the engine nacelle, the flaps are set in the chosen position by means of a hydraulic cylinder, so the controls are located on the right side of the main dashboard in front of the pilot and are operated with levers that are set in certain positions. set, so 15, 30 and 60 degrees down, if I'm right, I'm not a pilot.
Now it is a "easy" for the standard aircraft builders saw or cut the flaps loose from the wing and glue them in the desired angle, well, of course I have to make it much more difficult for myself
Judging from the sketch I understood the principle, but you also have to make it AND it has to be movable, so a lot of thinking about materials (printing would be the easiest, but that is very fragile with the resin I have now)
So first I made a sketch in SolidWorks to understand the principle.
[video=youtube]
View: http://youtube.com/watch?v=-FuMoKpQOEI%5B/video%5D
Ah, that makes it a bit clearer. Well first make those U-shaped pivots. I don't have any tube material, so first make rings yourself
So paste the pictures in a rough shape, so first square, then 8 angular, then 16 angular and then sand it smooth
And you get something like that with just a bit of pasting
Just loosen it up and you've got it
In the same way we also make the basic shape for the cylinder and we make a fixed pivot point for the torque, on the video that is the triangle
Lay down for a while
And we crochet everything together with pain and effort
Well, now I have to maken it nice and clear, add details en hopefully I can see better after the surgery