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I've been researching the lozenge camouflage scheme, as I am making a
computer workbench, and just for kicks thought I would make it look like the top of a biplane wing (looking good too). I stumbled onto this company in my search... http://www.avcloth.com/ They sell the covering in ceconite, which got me to thinking about covering my Hatz in the year 2020 when I finally finish it. Anybody deal with them before? Cool looking stuff. Mike |
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nafod40 wrote in message ...
I've been researching the lozenge camouflage scheme, as I am making a computer workbench, and just for kicks thought I would make it look like the top of a biplane wing (looking good too). I stumbled onto this company in my search... http://www.avcloth.com/ They sell the covering in ceconite, which got me to thinking about covering my Hatz in the year 2020 when I finally finish it. Anybody deal with them before? Cool looking stuff. Mike I saw a photo of a FlyBaby in lozenge, but IIRC it was hand-painted. re Cenconite in general; there are lots of references online. |
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Ed Wischmeyer wrote:
I've been researching the lozenge camouflage scheme, as I am making a computer workbench, and just for kicks thought I would make it look like the top of a biplane wing (looking good too). I stumbled onto this company in my search... IIRC, the originals were hand painted in an irregular pattern. The woven stuff probably would be regular, and you might have matching across seams to deal with... if you care about such things. Well, now that I'm a lozenge camouflage expert, or at least know more than I ever thought I would via google... They (the Germans) started out handpainting, but quickly moved to printed fabric, as it was much lighter and way easier. They had a different coloration for the top and bottom wings too, with dark on top and light on the bottom. I'm not up to speed on covering of aircraft with fabric. Wouldn't using a patterned ceconite mean you couldn't paint it? So the UV would act on it quickly? |
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