In actual fact, this turned out to be one of the easiest things.
Firstly, I tested my joining rig. This consisted of a block at the end of the wingtip to get the correct dihedral, and a lot of tape to hold the two parts of the wing in line. Having pre-sanded the ends of the wing panels to 4 degrees each, joining them at 8 degrees would give me a nice tignt join.
It
really turned out to be quite simple. I taped across at right angles to the join on the
underside of the wing, stretching the tape slightly to hold the two
pieces together tightly. Then I mixed up about 4 inches of 5 minute
epoxy (4 inches of glue and 4 inches of hardener). I squiggled that into
the open joint using a coffee mixer from the machine at the garage,
then blocked up the wingtip, using weights on the join to hold it square
and flat.
If
you didn't know, ordinary vinegar is a fantastic fluid for cleaning up
epoxy! It has the added bonus of making your pride and joy smell like
fish and chips...
Once joined, a tape is glued along the bottom using white wood glue
Once the white glue was dry, the excess tape was trimmed off and sanded to a nice edge.
That was it, the wings were joined!
Now for the covering...
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