
As previously stated in Part 1,
the traditional method for transitioning from the cluster of 8 tank
tubes to the lower tail section is to use a conical shroud with
"scalloped" cut-outs that fit around the tanks. Since many
modelers will need to compromise true-scaleness of tube sizes for
various reasons, most
models will require drawing this fairing from scratch. The
following page will show how one might go about "developing" this part
in a CAD or other drawing program (it also works using paper and pencil
with the correct drawing tools).
UPDATE: If you don't want to draw your own, you can use Steve Humphrey's Transition Maker.
Click on any small drawing
for a larger version. Feel free to print the larger drawings as a visual aid.

Before you can begin...

|
Step 5
Copy the triangle and vertical lines (from Step
4) to an unused part of the workspace. Using the top vertex of
the triangle as a center point, draw concentric circles or arcs through
the intersections created in Step 4.
Draw circles or arcs (of a different color) through the lower right
corner of the triangle and the right endpoint of the line above it.
Draw a horizontal line through the top vertex of the triangle,
extending to the outer edges of the the arcs or circles. You may
want to "trim" any overlapping arcs below the new line (or copy the
drawing and trim it elsewhere, just-in-case). This will form the
body of the final fairing template.
|

|
Step 6
Return to the Top View and draw line segments from
the center of the large circles to the end points of the line segments
from Step 2.
|

|
Step 7
Measure the angles of the lines created in Step 6
(relative to horizontal) and record them in order (I usually measure
the angles' precision to 3 or 4 decimal places).
|

|
Step 8
Starting from the center point of the arcs created
in Step 5, draw a line 11.25° to the outermost circle. This
will be the center line of the tank cutout.
|

|
Step 9
Take the angle measurements that were recorded in Step
7 and divide their values in half. Use the Radial-Copy tool to
copy the tank center line five separate times, using the new angle
values to space the new lines.
The lines could also be drawn individually with the Line tool by adding 11.25 to the halved angle values.
|

|
Step 10
Using the tank center line as an axis, Mirror-Copy the five lines created in Step 9.
|

|
Step 11
Use
the Bezier tool to connect the intersections of the lines as shown.
Only the innermost black (left) and outermost black (right) arcs are ignored
in this step.
|

|
Step 12
Use the Radial-Copy tool to make a total of 8 curves around center point, spacing them at 22.5°.
|
PART 1 - Logistics of the Clustered Tanks
PART 2 - How to Draw the Tank Fairing
PART 3 - How to Draw a Mitered Tank Template
|