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SE5A build_1

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Words and pictures, by John

 

I was starting to suffer balsa bashing withdrawal symptoms and so, to keep them at bay it looked like another build was needed. What to build? I like the look of WW1 fighters bimbling round the sky but I had already built two monoplanes, a Magnattilla and a Wing Warper. I liked Chas's SE5A. I didn't want to scratch build so a not too large a kit was needed. A 50 inch Flair SE5A it had to be.

The box was smaller than I imagined, but how much room do a few sheets of ply and some balsa sticks need? Included was all the hardware, tank and fittings and u/c wires.The parts are not laser cut but die-cut, although the fit seemed OK.

 

I built the fuse first using a SLEC building board to keep everything nice and straight .These are a simple idea but make fuselage building  much more accurate.The rear stringers are 3mm balsa which is quite weak,I must have broken them 4 times when handling the fuse. so I filled them in with 3mm planks .I also strengthened the corner joints on the rear frames and added 3mm ply braces around the two u/c blocks.

 

 

The 1.5mm ply sheeting was a bit of a fiddle to fit around the ally cabane struts on the top of the fuse, the instructions were not very clear but it will look alright when the covering goes on!

 

The u/c is made up of 5 wire pieces and held together with bound copper wire obtained by stripping some cable and then soldered up. The fairings are 1.5 and 3mm balsa sheet, made good with filler in the corners, again should not show when finished.

 

 

 

The tail feathers are standard construction, the plans show the elevators made in two parts and then connected by the wire joiner. I made them as one piece, glued the joiner in and then removed the centre section. This ensures everything ends up nice and flat. The wings are made up of three sections each, good if you like building wings. I thought the dihedral braces were very small but couldn't see a solution so lots of epoxy used

 

 

 

Flair must have designed the SE5A many years ago, over 20 I think, when servos were expensive items. There is just one in the centre section driving the ailerons via pushrods and bellcranks, probably possessing lots of slop. I shall be fitting a servo in each wing with nice short rods and make some paper tubes to feed the leads down. You will see that I have strengthened the wing tips with diagonals. I know they say that "light is right" but I need my planes to be a little forgiving.

Flair say this should fly on a .40 fourstroke, and as I am fitting a .52 the extra weight should not matter too much.

 

I shaped the LE of the top three sections separately and of course they didn't match up when brought together, so the bottom wing will be assembled first and then sanded down.

I've used epoxy, aliphatic resin and super glues. I can't find any real difference between model shop and Pound Shop super glues.

Flair supply a strip of shiny mylar to make the hinges from, but I will use the furry mylar for a bit more security.

The plane will be finished in olive drab Solartex on the fuse, and upper surfaces with linen or antique for the lowers, with RFC insignia.

 

 

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