Take a look at the prices of strip balsa and see how much that you save by doing the job yourself.
There are commercial balsa strippers available some of which work better than others but you can adapt a simple tool that you probably have already in your kit,what you need is the ordinary wood marking gauge,the sort that has a large stock at the end with a pin driven into the arm,take a warding file and get to work on the pin bringing it to a sharp edge,thin the pin out a bit while you are at it.
To strip your wood take the gauge in one hand and the balsa sheet in the other,slowly draw the wood downwards,this will effectively cut half way through the wood,turn the sheet over and do the same the other side,keep going until you have enough stock stripwood to do the job.
The marking gauge now doubles up for both marking and stripping wood with that small modification. :goodluck:
There are commercial balsa strippers available some of which work better than others but you can adapt a simple tool that you probably have already in your kit,what you need is the ordinary wood marking gauge,the sort that has a large stock at the end with a pin driven into the arm,take a warding file and get to work on the pin bringing it to a sharp edge,thin the pin out a bit while you are at it.
To strip your wood take the gauge in one hand and the balsa sheet in the other,slowly draw the wood downwards,this will effectively cut half way through the wood,turn the sheet over and do the same the other side,keep going until you have enough stock stripwood to do the job.
The marking gauge now doubles up for both marking and stripping wood with that small modification. :goodluck:
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