Workshop Tips

Workshop Tips

We have the best readers around! You guys are always coming up with clever ways to make building and flying easier, and we love when you share your tips with us at MAN@airage.com. Here are a few of our favorites.

Model Airplane News - RC Airplane News | Workshop Tips

A SHARP IDEA
Most model airplanes use dowels to secure the leading edge of the wing to the fuselage, and for easy installation, the nose of the dowel should be slightly tapered. Many modelers use sandpaper and a sanding block to make the taper. Next time, take the dowel and insert it into an electric or mechanical pencil sharpener. After a few seconds in the sharpener, the dowel will have a crisp, clean, even taper. A little sanding will create a smooth finish.

 

Model Airplane News - RC Airplane News | Workshop Tips

 

IN TOO DEEP
If you cut hinge slots using a hobby knife, you know that making slots of the correct depth is a hit-or-miss operation. Here’s a solution: Using a straightedge or a tape measure, lay the knife-blade point to the depth required (the blade must be parallel with the straightedge), and use a permanent-ink marker or some tape to create a line straight across the blade where it enters the wood. The line on the blade indicates when it’s at the correct depth.

 

Model Airplane News - RC Airplane News | Workshop Tips

NOW YOU SEE IT; NOW YOU DON’T
Most cowls require cutouts for the air vents and motor and speed-control access. To make the cutouts accurately, you need to measure and mark them properly. Ballpoint pens and pencils don’t write well on smooth, painted surfaces, and lines made by regular markers are difficult, if not impossible, to erase. A solution is to use dry-erase markers—the ones used in boardrooms across the country. Dry-erase markers, like regular markers, will leave a line on smooth surfaces, but when you’ve finished making the cutouts, you can simply use a rag to wipe off any remaining ink.

 

Model Airplane News - RC Airplane News | Workshop Tips

HANGING AROUND
We all know the kind of tangled mess that wall chargers can become if they aren’t kept orderly. Go to your local home-improvement store, and buy a few of the inserts that go into duplex outlet boxes. Attach them to a cabinet door or other out-of-the-way place, and voila!—you’ve got an easy, tangle-free way to hang your chargers for storage.

Model Airplane News - RC Airplane News | Workshop Tips

 

 

 

 

 

SERVO EXTENSION HOLDER

At one time or another, most of us have had to fish for a servo extension wire that slipped back inside the wing; but there is a solution. Cut a 3/16-inch hole in the bottom of the red plug from an old bottle of epoxy. Across the hole, cut a slot that’s just wide enough to squeeze the connector at the end of your servo extension through. Trim the access hole in the wing to fit the plug, and you’ll never have to go fishing again. This trick also works well for hold-down bolts.

 

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