More Provost Progress:
Glued the fuselage halves together and added the wings. I noticed in a lot of photos of parked JPs, the flaps were extended a few degrees, so I cut them out to replicate this.
ojovivo
Sade Olutola

blake kathryn
Stranger Things
d e v o n
occasionally subtle
we're not kids anymore.
Three Goblin Art
Acquired Stardust
Cosmic Funnies

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❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

izzy's playlists!

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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

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Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Claire Keane
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

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@anticlockwisepropeller
More Provost Progress:
Glued the fuselage halves together and added the wings. I noticed in a lot of photos of parked JPs, the flaps were extended a few degrees, so I cut them out to replicate this.
Airfix Jet Provost T.3/4
New project to get my modelling mojo back - it's quite the novelty to have a kit that actually fits together!
It's been a while, but I'm finally back doing the Lightning!
I put some lead weights in the nose, however I was a bit over-enthusiastic with the putty filler, which caused the nose to buckle on top. Now, as everyone knows, two wrongs make a right, and you should always fight fire with fire! 😜 So I applied more filler over the buckles, sanded it down, and now it looks acceptable again. In future, I shall have to be more patient and apply the filler in layers, waiting for each to set before applying the next.
After several failed attempts to close the gap in the belly, including inserting a plastic shim, I determined the halves of the model were just too thin to hold a secure join. To solve this once and for all, I glued a thin strip of plastic over the join, and put filler around the edges to get a smooth transition. At the same time, I closed the hole in the nose with yet more plasticard and filler. All the discoloration looks awful, but after sanding with increasingly fine grades of sandpaper, and a final polish with a low-cost microfibre cloth (kitchen roll 😜) it feels as smooth as the proverbial infant's posterior. So once it's got a coat of primer on it, it should look quite smart.
Finally, I decided to attack the starboard aileron. I'm not sure if it was past-me's over-aggressive sanding, or whether it was like that to begin with, but the inside edge of the aileron was noticeably too rounded compared to the port wing (at least, to my eye, anyway). So, I cut the offending corner off, replaced it with plasticard, then filled and sanded to my satisfaction.
Don't worry, I'm not in danger of finishing it any time soon, but by Jove, with the wings dry-fitted it really is starting to look like a Lightning!
One step forwards, two steps back
I found a pen that was the perfect diameter to create new tailpipes...
...But the blue-tack I used to hold the nose weight in expired, and destroyed the flimsy paper-card cockpit floor I made years ago
Ejection seats + Lightning gets a nose job
This week on Chris Makes A Lightning… airbrakes!
Wip Airfix Lightning F.3
I’m probably putting far more effort into this kit than it deserves, but it’s good practice for things I want to do well on kits which are more precious to me.