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Old 02-26-2008 | 05:48 PM
  #28  
50+AirYears
 
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 1,647
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From: Irmo, SC OH
Default RE: Weights of different coverings

And those Control Line Concours de' Elegance finishes can also take close to a month or more, with waiting for the finish solvents to outgas before the final sanding and polishing.

I thought it interesting the variation from one batch of Mono red to another. What was it, 5.7 oz/sq ft to over 9? At the 9 oz, that would put the finish weight about the same as the silk with 14 coats. But then again, how much sanding and polishing went into that silk/dope sample? Also, how long was given for the solvents to fully evaporate before weighing?

I sometimes fly in FAC competition. For lightness, normal finish is done with dyed or colored lightweight tissue. Thinned paint may be used for trim and markings, or the trim and markings are cut from other colors of tissue and applied using dope as an adhesive. In fact a number of competitors actually print off their covering with markings on an inkjet printer. Very effective and time saving for WW-1 lozenge patterns. One or two coats of thined Nitrate dope for fixing the color. Lot of the glow powered Free Flights are done this way too. Lighter than most films, and more temperature stable as well. Never see coverings sag. Also adds strength to the structure.
This would be an interesting expirement to do for this discussion. Build a couple (300 - 500 sq in) profile control liners, or maybe even a couple identical medium sized (300 - 500 sq in) radio jobs, ballast them so the uncovered frames weigh the same on a sensitive scale, cover each of them with a similar pattern, one with dope/silk or dope/tissue methods, cover the other with Mono or another film and then see which one is heavier when done.

Judged a number of static Mall Shows. Best finish awards always went to a doped finish. After a couple years, we decided to have a best traditional finish and a best film finish, just to give the film guys a chance at a prize. Did see a film covered model that was competitive with the best traditional, once. We could have sworn the plane (a 1/2A RC job was finished with tissue/dope. The trim looked like it had been painted on, even the trim on the nose of the wheel pants. Builder admitted that he builds, his wife covers. He couldn't do that kind of job to save his life.