I can't believe how slow my progress is! I must pick up the pace one way or another...
Anyway, here's what I have so far.
First, the nacelle at the wing tips.
If you recall from my previous post, the nacelle was a bit 'fat'. In fact, it looked more like a fuel tank! According to the 3-view diagrams over at the Luft'46 site, the nacelle should have been 'flush' with the wing tip.
And so I labored for many hours trying to find the best way to make the nacelle fit the open edge of the wing tip.
And here's what I got:
So far so good! Much better than the previous design. Most of the time spent for this was to align the segments of the nacelle with a corresponding segment on the wing. Doing this will help Metaseq produce a cleaner result by the time I do a boolean operation (Wing minus Nacelle).
Now my problem is that the nacelles are a bit on the narrow side. Almost like landing gear struts. If this ends up being hard to assemble, I may bump up the scale to 1:32. For now, I'm sticking with 1:48.
Next, I spent the rest of the weekend making the formers:
The fuselage formers (yellow) were relatively straightforward to make. Unfortunately, I can't say the same for the wing formers. The wing formers required a lot of work. Due to the dihedral of the wing, I couldn't just slice away with the knife tool to make the spars. I had to do some basic trigonometric calculations to derive the wing angle. Once I got the angle, I created a couple of plane primitives, which I then tilted to intersect the wings at 90 degrees. After that, I did a boolean operation to intersect the tilted plane with the wing to produce the cross cut which would later be used to make the spars.
Boy... I guess my high school trigonometry class had some use after all! Hehehehe.