You know , that brings up a good subject of FOAMIE’ Repairs .... Something I don’t think we’ve discussed as yet ... Good time to discuss putting back all the pieces , rather than starting over or making any hasty reinforcing judgements
![Rolling Eyes :roll:](./images/smilies/econ_rollingeyes.gif)
... The foam shell is just a Basic insulated “form" , just a part of the equation ...
Having crashed literally hundreds of Foamie RC planes , and putting them back together "in the field" , one can easily see how easy it is to add or subtract , or even Replace pieces of foam ... No grain to worry about . Just cut away the bad parts , cut and fit new parts and stick them in ... and in even in some of our worst crashes , we were back in the air in < 15 minutes... It all seems the same would apply to our Foamie ‘ trailers eh ?
JT, just relax, think this through , save all the parts and glue them back together ... being an homogeneous material , it doesn’t matter how you glue it back together ... (Great Stuff spray foam works great for joining less than perfectly fitting pieces ...
![Wink ;)](./images/smilies/econ_wink.gif)
) Once everything is back close , sand off the repair seams .. Once it’s covered , nobody will ever know eh ? (Unless you post pictures , which we would enjoy seeing it all go back together
![Pictures :pictures:](./images/smilies/pictures.gif)
)
Ps. You would not believe how many pieces and bits are crammed/sprayed/glued on later in that FoamStream nose ... a horror to behold ...
![Frightened :frightened:](./images/smilies/frightened.gif)
Once covered it looked pretty normal , albeit like a basketball ...
![Embarassed :oops:](./images/smilies/econ_embarassed.gif)
The Nasty bits sanded away ...