Saturday, December 6, 2025

Estes USS Enterprise #1275, Part 27, The Recovery Probe

When building my first Enterprise in the 1970s, I remember being disappointed by the recovery probe. It adds length for stability and area for packing the 18" parachute. It is a flight necessity but unsightly. 
I'm not going to fill the tube seams (it is 30" long!) but will fill the nose cone and plywood standoffs.
To make it less noticeable on the launcher, the recovery probe will be painted flat black.


The body tube marking guide matches up when wrapped around the tube.


A simple engine hook holds the probe to the Enterprise.
The upper probe tube is slotted to hold the upper bend of the hook.


The plywood hold-down piece had some chipping on both ends. These were glued down and sanded smooth.

The launch lug spirals and plywood grain was filled with CWF.




The plywood standoffs are glued onto the tube using pencil marks made earlier.

The launch lug was about 1/16" longer than its standoff. It was trimmed to fit.




Here's the completed low end.
The lug and hold down dowel were glued onto the standoffs.

No comments:

Post a Comment