yep, i know paul alright. Not personally, but i've seen his rb7, and wow it's amazing! i've heard he's had his work published in magazines and the redbull guys have also seen his model. i'm gonna try to make the wheels and front wing detachable, although its going to be pretty hard.kosioBG wrote:no, i don't want to, it's bad from an engineering point of view. i'm working on an imaginary car now, i may post some pics of it instead. i'm also an alonso fan and have made all of his cars since 2009. but the f138 is the first which has at least something to do with the truth. following the tips from this forum and paul (i don't know if you know him), we'll improve
neither have i, so i hope it goes wellkosioBG wrote:yes, i've written a couple of e-mails to him in german, his answers were always helpful. and great that you're making detachable parts, i've never done that =D>
oh, ok. do you know how he attaches the front wing on to the monocoque?kosioBG wrote:i already know how he attaches them to the suspension: he makes them fit tightly onto the hubs, and pushes them in place.
cool, thanks!kosioBG wrote:yes, he makes the nosecone and attaches 4 metal rods at each corner, and a hole at the same place on the monocoque whre they fit in
i don't have putty, but won't paper be too weak? i tried it before i put the exhausts in, and it was pretty weak. it stuck with the glue that i had, that was no problem, but it was weak. it made the back of the car look cool though, until i put the exhausts in.kosioBG wrote:this is hard, because it's not the way i'm shaping the sidepods, so i have no experience to help you here. but, you might try with paper sheets and lots of glue, then once dry, apply putty and sand it to get a smooth surface the same can be done with card, but it will end up too bulky, so i don't recommend it.
the only thing with this is that papier-mâché ends up very bumpy, and i can't seem to get the hang of smoothing it out.RicME85 wrote:Papier-mâché would work.
Lay some paper or very thin car (like printing paper) over the ribcage then apply papier-mâché to get the desired shape. This will then set nice and strong and can be given a nice smooth finish.
I build my 3D cars by using a ribcage technique for certain areas of the car.