I am aware of using the 50# test, mono-fil fishing line route, but if there is something available commercially or a diagram out there, I would appreciate it.


There is enough friction on the fuselage to have the plane banking and diving without putting stress on the wings.skypirate wrote:Same here. I've had my Stuka hanging with 8 lb. fishing line since spring of 2001. Looks like I need to do some spring cleaning on the cobwebs and sit the pilot up again. Home Depot sells some over priced hooks with rubber covers that match the ceiling pretty well. On the white 7, I've got the fishing line going around the engines for a nice banking and climbing position. All of them are hung with a single loop.
I do have a few interesting stories though. I can't remember which one, but either my ME109 or my P51 did take a fall from not having a good knot tied. It just fell straight down, doing a belly landing. Much to my surprise nothing broke. So, I've also been using super glue to secure the knot.
During xmas of 2003 or 2004, we were away for a week and a squirrel got into oven vent, clawed its way through the grill over the oven, and tore the house apart trying to get out. In the process, it climbed tseveral sets of venetian blinds (destroying them in the process) and apparently hopped onto the P51. When I got home, it was hanging very precariously. The squirrel did a tremendous amount of damage. Needless to say, I now view them as rats with furry tails.
The 262 is a great looking plane. I ended up taking off the pilot's legs to get him sit in the plane decently. I found the P40 at WM several years back, I think it was under the Motorworks name or something.Panther F wrote:Thanks for the close up pics of the white #7 262. Mine should be here Jan. 3. I've never seen that version of the P40, I have the AVG:
How concerned should we be over not having squirrel insurance? Up until now my comfort level was OK but now...During xmas of 2003 or 2004, we were away for a week and a squirrel got into oven vent, clawed its way through the grill over the oven, and tore the house apart trying to get out. In the process, it climbed tseveral sets of venetian blinds (destroying them in the process) and apparently hopped onto the P51. When I got home, it was hanging very precariously. The squirrel did a tremendous amount of damage. Needless to say, I now view them as rats with furry tails.
A friend of mine use to live in an apartment where raccoons could somehow get in over the ceiling and you could here them crawling around. They certainly weren't subtle about their presence.olifant wrote:The squirrel incident falls into the "too strange to be fiction" catagory!![]()
One time I had to chase two racoons out of my house. They came in while I was airing out through the kitchen door. Luckily they were more interested in the cats than my models!
Yeah, it would have. At first, it was quite a mystery trying to figure out what had happened. I found the squirrel in the kitchen in an empty wine bottle rack, then cornered him behind the microwave. I called animal control and two guys with large thick gloves tried to catch him. Despite being really pinned in with very little opportunity to escape, he did. Rather than run out the open back door, he tried to run further into the house. Instead, he ran into me, who wasn't about to let him do anymore damage. My foot that was going the opposite way. Yeah, I kind of got to place kick him out the back door.AlloySkull wrote:Haha, the squirrel incident should be a movie...![]()