Very nice. What brand covering did he use? Also, how do you avoid the covering sagging over time and ruining the appearance? I have some nice planes with monokote, but over the years the material sags and many times cannot be tightened up again. I've had to replace sections that would not tighten up again.
Not sure about his choice, but looks like monokote to me.and a astonishing finish for sure! deserved all of the prizes and kudos.
The best brand and long lasting is top flite´s monokote. i´ve used to cover most of my clients models with oracover (ultracote in USA) due to the almost bubble less overlapping of colors, but found out that after some 5-8 years the material start to delaminate badly.
a few tricks with monokote: overlap the l/e to the bottom corner about 1/4" of centerline, this will prevent most of the sight of the separation line
try to execute your paint design to paint over l/e and wingtips, the paint will completely hide the overlap seam
use a professional heat gun ( the one´s used for car adhesive covering are good and cheaper) they have more airflow and temperature. After you seal the corners of the covering, use the heat gun to stretch the covering to the limit (in order to avoid warps, do like this: center sheeting, l/e sheeting, t/e sheeting then go for the bottom panel. next start to stretch one rib bay and do the oposite side and keep switching until all done). When the wing pane is ready, get the softest cloth you have, apply heat over the sheeting about 5" at time and come over with the cloth pressing softly the covering to the sheeting and capstrips. this will make the material stick to the entire surface not denting like an iron would do. Bonus: will look like a doped finish with the corners sucked to the wood
i paint all of the remaining colors over the monokote and apply a final clear coat over the entire plane. this will prevent sun fading of colors, cornes and seal lips will be virtually invisible, impossible to delaminate and i suspect gives less chance to sag along the way
i avoid dark colors (because sun exposure overheating) and never let the plane on heavy sunny days exposed for hours
The transparent colors and basid colors like white, yellow, red and light blue hardly sag at all
sometimes sags a little and a heat gun will put it back in shape, if properly tauted the sag will be minimal.
this Tgazer is 10 years old now under brazilian tropical sun, still look the same