Bud Nosen Mr. mulligan
#677
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I have to say, I've ordered a lot of glass parts from FS, and they were always really nice, only requiring only light filling and sanding. Not the case here. This cowl is in seriously rough shape. I guess you gotta take the good with the bad. I'm not going to try for a new one, I'll deal with it. Just a little surprised.
#678
I have to say, I've ordered a lot of glass parts from FS, and they were always really nice, only requiring only light filling and sanding. Not the case here. This cowl is in seriously rough shape. I guess you gotta take the good with the bad. I'm not going to try for a new one, I'll deal with it. Just a little surprised.
was in rough shape as well, misaligned seams! What wheel pants did you get? If it is the ones I got,
they are totally wrong for the Mr. Mulligan, too short and tall, totally wrong profile, I ordered the ones
from what was "Stan's Fibertech", they had the correct profile, but don't know if the new people that now
own the company, I think it is now called "Fibertech N More", still mold them.
Bill D.
#679
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H Bill. No, there definately not the correct shape. For one, they should come to much more of a point at the back. I'm not as worried about that as it's no scale bird. Maybe stand way off scale. Thanks for the input.
#680
The last Mr. Mulligan I built, years ago, I used those wheel pants and they didn't look
to bad, as it was a way-way standoff scale, had the extended cowl on it, with a Quadra 35
in it, never got to fly it, sold it, as I was moving back overseas and couldn't afford to take
built airplanes, so they all had to go.
Currently have a slow build on my 3rd Mr. Mulligan, it is from a short kit from Lazer-Works
and was cut from my original Bud Nosen (not AA Indust.) kit that I sent to him, and a redesign
was done to ad a wing tube. Mike Whar did a build here on RCU of this short kit back in 2009
http://www.rcuniverse.com/forum/kit-...ulligan-5.html
starts on post #121
Bill D.
to bad, as it was a way-way standoff scale, had the extended cowl on it, with a Quadra 35
in it, never got to fly it, sold it, as I was moving back overseas and couldn't afford to take
built airplanes, so they all had to go.
Currently have a slow build on my 3rd Mr. Mulligan, it is from a short kit from Lazer-Works
and was cut from my original Bud Nosen (not AA Indust.) kit that I sent to him, and a redesign
was done to ad a wing tube. Mike Whar did a build here on RCU of this short kit back in 2009
http://www.rcuniverse.com/forum/kit-...ulligan-5.html
starts on post #121
Bill D.
Last edited by Bill Diedrich; 04-05-2015 at 07:48 AM.
#681
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Thanks for the link. That's odd. I searched high and low for a Mulligan build thread and never came across that. Yeah, I added a wing tube as well. Cheap insurance. Hopefully mine turns out as nice as yours did. I think I may skin the gear legs next and make the fairings and install the pants. Seems like an ambitious project.
#683
Don't remember exactly what my last Mulligan weighed in at, but I think Mike's was
somewhere around the 30 # mark all up ready to fly, his was covered with white
Monocote if my memory is correct, need to go back and read his build again sometime.
somewhere around the 30 # mark all up ready to fly, his was covered with white
Monocote if my memory is correct, need to go back and read his build again sometime.
#684
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I notice, just from skimming through the pics, he had a big ol twin in there. Was his the same size as the Nosen? Sorry to bombard you with questions. It's been a little bit difficult finding much info on this kit. Still can't believe all the searches I did, didn't turn up the thread you posted a link to. Well, Easter's officially done at my house, everyone is fat and happy, I just may get a little bit done here. I hope everyone had a good easter.
#685
Moto-X, the guy that started that thread used a RCGF 50 cc twin in his Mr. Mulligan,
Mike used a Sachs 4.2 single cylinder in his. Mine will have a SPE 50cc twin I bought
NIB got a great deal on it a few years back.
If you go to the search here on RCU and type in Mr. Mulligan you will find many threads
on this model..
BTW check out this place for graphics on the Mr. Mulligan:
www.cfcgraphics.com
Bill D.
Mike used a Sachs 4.2 single cylinder in his. Mine will have a SPE 50cc twin I bought
NIB got a great deal on it a few years back.
If you go to the search here on RCU and type in Mr. Mulligan you will find many threads
on this model..
BTW check out this place for graphics on the Mr. Mulligan:
www.cfcgraphics.com
Bill D.
Last edited by Bill Diedrich; 04-05-2015 at 06:10 PM.
#686
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Wow, all those huge engines. Back in the day when this kit came out, I can remember seeing these planes fly with engines like the Fox 78, the small Quadras and of course the small Zenoah's, especially the G38. I'm not knocking the bigger engines but wow how times have changed.
#687
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Well, I feel a lot better now with the DA 50 on mine. I kind of wish I went with a twin, there's more than enough room inside the cowl. As far as the graphics go, I guess I'm kind of set in my ways. I always use the same guy and don't really have a desire to go anywhere else. Thanks again for the info Bill.
#688
Wow, all those huge engines. Back in the day when this kit came out, I can remember seeing these planes fly with engines like the Fox 78, the small Quadras and of course the small Zenoah's, especially the G38. I'm not knocking the bigger engines but wow how times have changed.
he built weighed somewhere in the 12-13 # range, pretty light by todays standards.
#689
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jeez, I have a tendency to build a little heavy and all, but 12-13 lbs? That's half. At least. Mines at 18 now. Without fabric and paint. Maybe im just that inexperienced of a builder.
#690
that was available to power them with was a 60 size engine. Ain't no way a 60 is going to fly an 18 to
30 pound airplane, so they built very light. Back in the early days of modeling when they were really
just getting into radio control wingspans were up in the 80" plus sized models, a "hand me down" of the
old free flight designs, and they were powered by around 15 to 29 sized engines, and they were nothing
but basically stick built models with a lot of dihedral. Could a quarter scale sized Mr. Mulligan be built to
12-13 pounds, most likely could with super light balsa and thin CA, but it wouldn't be strong enough for the
engines we use today. If you are currently at 18# your ready to fly weight with be somewhere in the 21-23#
range with the 50cc single you have for the plane and it will fly just fine, remember this has a high lift airfoil
on it.
Bill D.
Last edited by Bill Diedrich; 04-06-2015 at 05:33 AM.
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yeah I get that, I guess what I should have said is that if they could build them at 12 pounds, we should be able to get it a little less. I tend to over build a lot, but you are right again, a single cylinder gas engine would tear it apart if not over built a little.
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I have to say, I've ordered a lot of glass parts from FS, and they were always really nice, only requiring only light filling and sanding. Not the case here. This cowl is in seriously rough shape. I guess you gotta take the good with the bad. I'm not going to try for a new one, I'll deal with it. Just a little surprised.
Dave
#694
My Feedback: (19)
I've bought parts from FS quite a few times. Sometimes they are excellent and sometimes they are junk and go in the trash in favor of something else. Its quite sad but there are few other good choices these days. I can deal with rough surfaces and pinholes, but the basic shape has to be right and the quality of the fiberglass layup has to be acceptable. Recently, when building a project I look to the ARF world first for fiberglass parts and many times the results are quite rewarding and reasonably priced. Sadly, probably not the case for something like the Mulligan cowl and pants though.
#695
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The mold must be very old and needing some maintenance, as the cowl I bought a couple years back
was in rough shape as well, misaligned seams! What wheel pants did you get? If it is the ones I got,
they are totally wrong for the Mr. Mulligan, too short and tall, totally wrong profile, I ordered the ones
from what was "Stan's Fibertech", they had the correct profile, but don't know if the new people that now
own the company, I think it is now called "Fibertech N More", still mold them.
Bill D.
was in rough shape as well, misaligned seams! What wheel pants did you get? If it is the ones I got,
they are totally wrong for the Mr. Mulligan, too short and tall, totally wrong profile, I ordered the ones
from what was "Stan's Fibertech", they had the correct profile, but don't know if the new people that now
own the company, I think it is now called "Fibertech N More", still mold them.
Bill D.
Mike
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The cowl isn't really bad enough that I wont use it. Will just require about double the effort. The cowl and pants for my PICA Waco, and the Cowl for my TFGS Corsair are mint. So, one bad one , to me, aint all that bad.
#697
Glass cowls frequently require work. You may remember the glass work on my Vega.
I clean them with acetone and then give them a sanding with 200 grit. A coat of primer brings out the pinholes, etc. I then get out the spot putty and begin the fill, sand, prime, fill, sand, prime routine. Eventually the glass cowl gets whipped into shape.
I'm sure that you'll get your cowl whipped into shape in no time.
I clean them with acetone and then give them a sanding with 200 grit. A coat of primer brings out the pinholes, etc. I then get out the spot putty and begin the fill, sand, prime, fill, sand, prime routine. Eventually the glass cowl gets whipped into shape.
I'm sure that you'll get your cowl whipped into shape in no time.
#698
OK Mike the dimensions of the wheel pants that I bought from Stan's Fibertech are:
12" L x 4 1/2" H x 2 15/16" W ( really closer to 3")
Couple pics attached for comparison, the white one is from FS.
Bill D.
12" L x 4 1/2" H x 2 15/16" W ( really closer to 3")
Couple pics attached for comparison, the white one is from FS.
Bill D.
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I was just on the fiber tech n more site and all they have for the nosen Mulligan is the cowl. No pants. They have the pants for the Hostetler Mulligan, that look to be right. Being that the WH is at 26%, they would probably fit pretty good. I'm not really concerned enough to buy them at this point, but who knows.