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Michael Carter
07-21-2007, 02:17 PM
Ended up having to build a new radio rack for the center control stand. I thought the old one would fit the new auto-pilot, but I forgot about the thickness of the wood, and the new AP has a chassis case where as the old one didn't.

Well, I got the correct angles on this one at the rear, and everything will fit now.

http://i63.photobucket.com/albums/h146/boeing722/radiobox3.jpg

http://i63.photobucket.com/albums/h146/boeing722/radiobox2.jpg

http://i63.photobucket.com/albums/h146/boeing722/raidiobox1.jpg

Michael Carter
07-25-2007, 07:00 AM
Here is the finished radio rack for the control stand:

http://i63.photobucket.com/albums/h146/boeing722/radiobox6.jpg

http://i63.photobucket.com/albums/h146/boeing722/radiobox5.jpg

http://i63.photobucket.com/albums/h146/boeing722/radiobox4.jpg

Tomlin
07-25-2007, 08:59 AM
Michael,

That looks amazing. I always worry that wood will not look correct, but it appears in the photo that your rack has been painted in such a way to not ever know it's wood. Looks great!

Westozy
07-25-2007, 09:01 AM
That is excellent work Mike, truly awesome. Love the switch caps, where did you get them? lol

Gwyn

SAS884
07-25-2007, 01:58 PM
Amazing jobb, a work done by a truly skilled craftsman, hmmm hope a spelled that right.

yoss
07-25-2007, 04:01 PM
Realy cool

Great job

Michael Carter
07-25-2007, 06:56 PM
Thanks guys. I was beginning to think everyone was on vacation.

The secret to using wood to build with that will eventually be painted, is to use a body glaze to seal the woodgrain and fill in all imperfections and pinholes.

I learned this trick a long time ago when I used to build Star Trek Constitution-Class command cons (Captain Kirk's chair.)

After sanding off the first coat (wear a mask even if the orbital sander is supposed to suck up the dust), hit with a light coat of primer and find and fill the imperfections. Sand it again and check a second time. If you're good to go after the second coat of glaze, hit it with a green etching primer, sand with 600 grit and apply your final coat.

In this case my entire sim is painted in Krylon Rust-Tough Gloss Battleship Gray. I forget the number, but I have to order this as no one carries it locally.

If you take your time and use the body glaze you would never know it's made out of wood. It seals and fills to perfection. You get an absolutely smooth and glass like finish coat.

Thanks for the replies...and yeah, those switch caps look pretty darn good on 30 year old Collins parts! :D

Westozy
07-26-2007, 05:36 AM
Can you get those tuners to interface Mike?

Michael Carter
07-26-2007, 10:01 AM
I've considered it, and because they are only rotary switches I don't see why I couldn't get them to work in the sim. I haven't tried anything with them yet, but if they behave like any other normal rotary switch it should work.

I would have to set the frequencies on the default FS frequencies before shuting down the sim so the radio freqencies on the heads would match those in FS upon the next startup.

FSUIPC has the facilities for programming the knobs.

It's a bit farther down on the list at this point. I'd really like to keep these radio heads if I can get them working, but the digital solution from several manufacturers has some appeal as well. The newer radio heads are rather plain looking though

ivar hestnes
07-26-2007, 03:12 PM
Your radio-rack is beatyful. Very well done:)