Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Contemplating Color

 

Even though the Clipper does not yet have its silver coat, I've been wondering what color paint is in the cans stacked along the hangar wall. Maybe it was this rainbow outside my window last week that got me thinking about it.  More likely I was trying to remember what Nick had told me about the design and color he has chosen. Then again, maybe color was on my mind triggered by a flight in our 150 that George and I made to Dansville recently. So many colorful possibilities.

A runway model if there ever was one. Design by Dior?

Reds seemed to dominate.
Hey George, what do you think about that spiffy Cessna logo?!
This Cessna 150 seems bigger than ours. Is it an illusion created by the paint scheme?
This looks like a grass runway Armani model...

I thought the red plane above had cool striping until I spied this one.
So many possibilities.
Not too bold, not too busy, this one looks just right  to me.
Now I just have to wait to see what Nick has chosen.
Photos and text by Kathleen Jacques.

Monday, May 14, 2012

Poly-Fiber Predicaments

Nick has restored many planes using the Poly-Fiber system, and he has a copy of their manual in the hangar. I wish I'd read it before we started. The manual is full of tips and advice, and would have forewarned that trying to apply a subsequent coat of Poly-Brush over a not-quite-dry previous coat can cause the second coat to lift up and off the Poly-Fiber.  Note the light color spots on the fuselage just over Tom's right shoulder.

Looking closely you can see a couple of "lifted"spots where another coating of Poly-Brush will be required.


Another coat  of Poly-Brush is generally a good idea.
The orange tint becomes deeper and richer and any missed spots become quite evident.

Executive decision making...
...or deciding if the work table can be cleared for lunch?

Photos and text by Kathleen Jacques.

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Hangar Talk


Loitering around hangars, checking out the latest projects, swapping stories (controller transgressions are especially popular), are a pilot's version of the post-game replay.  Pilots like to tell tales and share information as well; so it is that people are making their way to Nick and Tom's hangar to see how the Clipper is coming along. It's a good excuse to take a break from the Poly-Brush.

Don Perricone talks to Tom while George Hernandez and Nick figure something out...

Don Perricone has aviation and restoration experience, click on Don's name for a small piece of his story. George Hernandez, my partner in a Cessna 150 here at Marcellus, has a great aviation website that you're going to want to see; click on George's name for his blog "SOARCNY".


Student pilots with airplane restoration skills drop by too (this includes me, more or less); Bob Oxford, master painter  (I recently saw some of his handiwork and it was flawless), stopped by to see Nick and the Clipper's progress.

Bob and Nick

Photos and text by Kathleen Jacques.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

More Fun Than Golf

  




Not that I've ever actually played golf, so what do I know, but watching (ahem, "assisting") Nick and Tom restore the Clipper sure has been fun. Even when parts don't fit, parts vanish, or mystery parts present themselves, these guys keep smiling.  If I've learned anything from this experience it's that persistence pays off; re-think, re-jigger, go home and sleep on it, and try again tomorrow -  somehow the parts will fall into place.


Sometimes the parts really do vanish.  "Did anybody see where that went?"








Not all work sessions leave us this happy - this was a good one.  Wayward parts notwithstanding.

Photos and text by Kathleen Jacques.