Hi,
One final comment on fillets. My point is not that it is fillets can't be built (or are overly difficult to build) but rather that they are additional parts that need to be designed, have matching presses/tooling built for (for the left and right hand sides of a plane) and then have to be attached to a complex shape, typically connecting two separate large subassemblies (the main fuselage to the wing).
As an example, here are some links to Witold Jaworski's great work on 3D modeling of the SBD Dauntless (as shown on the ARC Forums website), and a 1/4 scale model of the SBD built by Micheal Fetyko (as shown on Model Airplane News website).
Image 1
Image 2
Here also is another from Witold Jaworski (from the Britmodeler site and the Airplanes in 3D website) showing the basic fuselage section shapes and wing locations that these fillets have to conform to. From this image you can see the complexity of the shapes, especially just aft of the wing trailing edge where the fuselage section bow in little before flaring out again, and then making a sharp turn along the bottom of the plane.
Image 3
Image 4
And finally from the image below (from the Blender Artist Website) you can see some of the panel lines of the fillet pieces, showing the need for several parts per side of the airplane to fillet each wing to the fuselage.
Image 5
In general, the point that I am trying to show here is not that fillets are a bad thing but only that planes with filleted intersections between the wing and fuselage can be more complex and/or time consuming to build than a plane with a 90 degree (or near 90 degree) connection, leading to a potentially more expensive build.
Additionally, operationally if trying to repair damage if you don't have the specific replacement parts on hand you would likely need to "beat to fit" a patch into place, to better match the complex geometry, leading to potentially moe man hours to keep a plane operational (in the event of damage), etc.
Regards
Pat
PS. Although it is not commonly mentioned all parts are typiclly built to within a certain tolerance, and fitting a complex shape to two different subassemblies (the wing and fuselage) can thus require a bit of "make it fit" type engineering to bring everything together.
One final comment on fillets. My point is not that it is fillets can't be built (or are overly difficult to build) but rather that they are additional parts that need to be designed, have matching presses/tooling built for (for the left and right hand sides of a plane) and then have to be attached to a complex shape, typically connecting two separate large subassemblies (the main fuselage to the wing).
As an example, here are some links to Witold Jaworski's great work on 3D modeling of the SBD Dauntless (as shown on the ARC Forums website), and a 1/4 scale model of the SBD built by Micheal Fetyko (as shown on Model Airplane News website).
Image 1
Image 2
Here also is another from Witold Jaworski (from the Britmodeler site and the Airplanes in 3D website) showing the basic fuselage section shapes and wing locations that these fillets have to conform to. From this image you can see the complexity of the shapes, especially just aft of the wing trailing edge where the fuselage section bow in little before flaring out again, and then making a sharp turn along the bottom of the plane.
Image 3
Image 4
And finally from the image below (from the Blender Artist Website) you can see some of the panel lines of the fillet pieces, showing the need for several parts per side of the airplane to fillet each wing to the fuselage.
Image 5
In general, the point that I am trying to show here is not that fillets are a bad thing but only that planes with filleted intersections between the wing and fuselage can be more complex and/or time consuming to build than a plane with a 90 degree (or near 90 degree) connection, leading to a potentially more expensive build.
Additionally, operationally if trying to repair damage if you don't have the specific replacement parts on hand you would likely need to "beat to fit" a patch into place, to better match the complex geometry, leading to potentially moe man hours to keep a plane operational (in the event of damage), etc.
Regards
Pat
PS. Although it is not commonly mentioned all parts are typiclly built to within a certain tolerance, and fitting a complex shape to two different subassemblies (the wing and fuselage) can thus require a bit of "make it fit" type engineering to bring everything together.