Dean, the vacuum forming idea is intriguing. I'd have to build an entire system to even test the theory, though, so maybe another project.
Update: Little slow on the build lately. Work got busy, came down with a cold, and my writing has taken an uptick lately as I work on some novel edits. Another delay came from spending time in testing glues with styrene sheeting and the plywood/putty surface. Gorilla Glue, surprisingly, didn�t work at all. Plastic pulled off like it had been stuck on with Scotch tape. The Gorilla Super Glue Impact-Tough (formulated with rubber particles for elasticity), worked the trick, though, and it holding like nobody�s business. Progress photos below. I hope to have everything sheeted and ready to prime and scribe within a week or so.
The instructions have an actual-size print of all of the parts in the kit. I printed the hull bottom out and used it as a template to cut the styrene for the sheeting. The cutouts are for the propeller wells.
The prop wells are tricky in that the hull sheeting has to be cut out, and then the insert has to be cut as well, sanded to shape, and glued in.
For sheeting the hull sides I use my tape cheat: run a strip of tape along the hull, cut it along the hull lines with a little extra room, stick the tape on styrene, then cut. On a nearly flat sided hull like this it isn't nearly as impressive of a trick, but it did help where the bow rises up.
The styrene along the forward part of the hull has been glued in, then cut and sanded to shape. The after hull has the styrene glued on, but not yet cut and sanded.
More work on the prop well inserts. The sides of the wells have been sheeted, just waiting for it to dry to flush-sand them. Note the seam along the sides between the hull side and bottom sheeting. I goofed. I'll fill the gap with Aves putty and flush sand it all at the same time.
