all right boys and girls....finally, something to post.
(try to keep the applause down) Finished the formers last night, so here is a fuselage short kit.
You can see the formers are notched to fit over the crutch, which will be the 2 long sticks laying on the bottom of the pic. They are 56" long and will sit on a jig with uprights at each former. With everything centered, and clamped, hopefully things will go together moderately straight. "Things going together" interprets to mean 1/8 x 1/2 balsa strips will be laid in the notches, front to back.
The 2 panels are wing saddles and are glued to the crutches, running from the firewall to former 8, also fitting in notches in the formers.
Each former slot took at least 3 cuts - one down the center, one down either side, then slide side to clear the slot...since there are something like 356 slots (count 'em Glen to check for sure)
, that's 356 x .....carry the 7, divide by 2.4 - something over 1000 cuts.
In all this I only broke 1 saw blade
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The crutch sticks started as a 56" long piece of 1x3 kiln dried pine. Would have been easier if I had a table saw, but eventually wound up with a bunch of 1/4 x 1/2 pine sticks, quite a few dull #11 Xacto blades and a lot of tooth picks.
So material consumption so far is 7 sheets of 1x4 lite ply (1/8); chunk of 3/4 ply, chunk of 3/8 ply, and chunk of 1/2 ply. Of course I made a copy of all this stuff, so I do have a second fuse kit, set aside for future use. And by the way, these results are called a short kit, I guess because we're short the rest of the wood to actually make a fuselage.
Resulting from these efforts, I also have leftover 2'x2' pieces of 3/4 ply, 3/8 ply, 1/2 ply, and a massive pile of scrap 1/8 ply......I will sell that at a very good price.......let's call it a pigmy kit, or dwarf kit...