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#1 | ||
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Workin on it...
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: San Diego
Posts: 138
Thanked 6 Times in 6 Posts
Club: Bill G fan club!
iTrader: (0)
Friends: (3)
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I'm either going to get good at flying em, or get good at fixin em!
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#2 | ||
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Tekton Ochroma Pyramidale
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Blackstock, South Carolina
Posts: 2,293
Thanked 64 Times in 63 Posts
Club: Lancaster County Fliers
iTrader: (0)
Friends: (3)
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Favorite tools are:
X-Acto knife Sanding blocks, Fine tooth Zona saw Miter for saw. I have others, but these are the ones I use most. I found it best rather than to buy a bunch of tools based upon what others use was to buy the tools I needed as I needed them. This resulted in a set that is custom tailored to exactly the building I did; rather than someone else's set that invariably would consist of a bunch of stuff I would probably never use. |
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Flying: AeroCraft Skimmer "2212"; Tom Hunt Miss Stik Sr.
On the shelf: AeroCraft 1913 Eastbourne Waiting until the day I become worthy: Dave Thornton Bird of Time.
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#3 | ||
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: White Lake, MI
Posts: 766
Thanked 83 Times in 82 Posts
Club: United Flying Organization
iTrader: (0)
Friends: (6)
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As part of Murcoflier's building events he started a thread over on RCGroups on tools used for building balsa planes.
http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/showthread.php?t=1752811 Lots of good stuff, but like FlyWheel said, I do not have even 1/2 of what is on this just and I have been building for a couple of years now. You typically buy stuff as you need it. Steve |
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Stevens AeroModel Daddy-O 525, Groove G-480
Mountain Models Firestorm, P-51, EVA Sport/Bipe, Dandy/Dandy Sport Pocket Rocket, Stevephoon 3D, SSPR - Steve's Simple Pylon Racer DJAerotech Chrysalis 2M-E Sailplane, Misc Foamy Combat Planes..... |
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#4 | ||
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Workin on it...
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: San Diego
Posts: 138
Thanked 6 Times in 6 Posts
Club: Bill G fan club!
iTrader: (0)
Friends: (3)
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Cool thanks, Second refrence to a ZONA Saw, gonna have to look that one up. Micro mark carries alot of "neat" tools. But I find it funny that the miniture power tools are almost as expensive as their full size counterparts.
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I'm either going to get good at flying em, or get good at fixin em!
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#5 | ||
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Dennis V
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Wisconsin, USA
Posts: 5,705
Thanked 558 Times in 544 Posts
Club: www.racinercclub.com (I'm the newsletter editor)
iTrader: (1)
Friends: (16)
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Originally Posted by BroncoSquid
I've got both a scroll saw and a small band saw. The scroll saw works when you have to saw inside a piece of material. For everything else, the bandsaw gets turned on. That saw has no problems cutting anything from 1/32 balsa sheeting to 3/4 inch solid plywood. Or even a 2X4 cut in the 4 inch direction for that matter.
What ever belt sander you get, make danged certain its got a high quality setup for pulling all the sanding dust out with a big shop vacuum. You won't believe how much dust one of these belt sanders can create in 30 seconds of sanding balsa, ply or similar. I've got an old Delta belt sander with a 1 by 30 inch belt. It hooks up to my shop vac. Many places, including Harbor Freight now sell them. Buy a wide variety of belts from very fine to the coursest belt grit you can get for sanding that plywood stuff. The very fine belts make it easy to precisely cut the angle of the many many balsa sticks used in a stick built model. |
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DennyV
Retired and the days are just too short, busier than ever!
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#6 | ||
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old hat
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: joliet il
Posts: 2,096
Thanked 161 Times in 158 Posts
Club: joliet rc club rt 66
iTrader: (0)
Friends: (13)
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I have a band saw and a scroll saw / drill press both table top and floor model all picked up at garage sales /flea markets . I did not buy cheap ones made newer than 1960 i bought old cast iron built tools from the 50's and older . If they still work today i cant wear them out .lol My stand up drill press i bought at a auction for 100 bucks when american airlines was selling off its stuff at the airport ,it has a 50's date on the name plate . It was very heavy i think thats why no one else was bidding on it to much. lmao I use the scroll saw the most for cutting out parts and its the go to machine. For small tools i have a cheap balsa stripper (master airscrew) i think around 7 dollars and their razor plane is about the same cost,both are used on about every build . I bought the best sanding tools in the world 15 years ago and they are not cheap but i have not wore them out and still work as good today as when i bought them. http://www.averytools.com/products.asp?dept=20 Small saws are a must and i even bought some fine tooth saws from Japan to cut large stuff up without tearing the balsa up. Foremost makes a angle stick cutters and angle sanding tools for around 20 dollars a piece and i want to buy both real soon,builder friends say they are great. I also make jigs and other homemade tools to get the job done on my own over 35 years of building and save them . Hope this helps.
joe
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