MILVIZ Corsair Skins
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Thread: MILVIZ Corsair Skins

  1. #1

    MILVIZ Corsair Skins

    still WIP - working on a new template


  2. #2
    That looks brilliant, Thomas! I love the weathering!

    Cheers,
    Mark
    My scenery development galleries:
    https://www.dropbox.com/sh/x0skkam7xu8zz8r/DFwnonB1nH

    Solomon 1943 V2 Open beta download: http://www.sim-outhouse.com/download...on-1943-V2.zip
    Solomon 1943 V2 update 2013-02-05 download: http://www.sim-outhouse.com/download...2013-02-05.zip


    Current Project: DHC-4 / C-7a Caribou by Tailored Radials
    Dev-Gallery at https://www.dropbox.com/sh/qjdtcoxeg...bAG-2V4Ja?dl=0

  3. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by roger-wilco-66 View Post
    That looks brilliant, Thomas! I love the weathering!

    Cheers,
    Mark

    The paintkit has a lot of weathering which is great to see

  4. #4
    Thanks !!!

    I like the weathering that came with the paint kit - but I always make my own, that is to me the fun part of making skins.

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  6. #6
    Great work, Tom! It's interesting with the Corsair (and rather very unique to it), that most of those rivets were/are actually spot welds on the real thing, throughout the fuselage and wing, etc. - most rivets were only around the edges of the panels/joints, where as most of the stringers and a lot of the ribs were spot-welded to the skins.

    Just as one example, in all of the brightly-marked areas seen in these photos of a freshly rebuilt Corsair rear fuselage/empennage, those are all areas where there are lines of spot welds:
    http://www.sandersaeronautics.com/resto ... 1-1024.jpg
    http://www.sandersaeronautics.com/resto ... 5-1024.jpg
    http://www.sandersaeronautics.com/resto ... 3-1024.jpg

    The bright areas of the metal is where an acid wash has been brushed onto the aluminum to purify the surface prior to spot welding.

    More on just the rear fuselage/empennage assembly can be seen here:
    http://www.odegaardwings.com/corsair-pictures/


    As you can see on the reverse sides of these sections, the skins are spot-welded to the stringers and ribs, with rivets applied in strategic locations and at the edges of the panel (to the longerons and joints/joining ribs).
    http://www.sandersaeronautics.com/resto ... 2-1024.jpg
    http://www.sandersaeronautics.com/resto ... 9-1024.jpg

    On these sections of the wings, you can see more indications of lines of spot welding where there is brushed-lines/swaths on the metal that is a different tone. All of the rivets are dark in color/tone.
    http://www.sandersaeronautics.com/resto ... 7-1024.jpg
    http://www.sandersaeronautics.com/resto ... 5-1024.jpg
    http://www.sandersaeronautics.com/resto ... 8-1024.jpg

    Through the main cockpit section, again you can see how, for the most part, the skins are spot welded to the ribs, with riveting only mainly at the edges of the panels.
    http://www.sandersaeronautics.com/resto ... 4-1024.jpg
    http://www.sandersaeronautics.com/resto ... 5-1024.jpg
    http://www.sandersaeronautics.com/resto ... 6-1024.jpg
    http://www.sandersaeronautics.com/resto ... 8-1024.jpg

  7. #7
    Well, there is something I didn't know! Thanks so much John!

    This must have been quite a serious weight saving method for the Corsair's structure. Coming from the shipbuilding industry myself, where welding is the primary method of construction, the riveting used in aircraft production always seemed "old technology" to me. Having studied fatigue and cracking of welded connections however, I understand why they are avoided in aviation, where alternating loads are the norm. Connecting ribs to shell however is not a fatigue loaded joint so spot welding sounds like a nice method.

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    Nice looking, Tom!

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  18. #18
    and third one

    http://www.lockonfiles.com/files/fil...f-suez-crisis/



    I'll wait a week or two to be sure they don't need updates and I'll upload them here as well

    more on the way


  19. #19
    SOH-CM-2024 jmig's Avatar
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    Very nice looking skins. Well done!
    John

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  22. #22
    SOH-CM-2024 jmig's Avatar
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    Does anyone know of any 'Airshow' ready skins. I love the airplane. However, I don't care much for the dirty worn paint jobs. I want one that can be flown into airshow for display. Shinny and clean!
    John

    ***************************
    My first SIM was a Link Trainer. My last was a T-6 II


    AMD Ryzen 7 7800 X3D@ 5.1 GHz
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    RTX 3080 10GB VRAM, Meta Quest 3 VR Headset

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    Thomas, I always understood that those white lines on the nose were actually masking tape, to keep some of the oil and fuel smell away from the pilot, so you shouldn't be able to see panel lines and rivets in the white
    You can find most of my repaints for FSX/P3D in the library here on the outhouse.
    For MFS paints go to flightsim.to

  25. #25

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