Xenogenesis
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While I don't do aircraft, my experience with chrome-laden '60s cars has taught me enough to suggest this:
BMF is very thin and very soft, so multiple layers and edges are virtually invisible when properly burnished. Cover the bottom surface first and cut it as well as possible. Cover the top and cut it very slightly too long. Then, fold it under to the bottom and burnish the edge with a flat wooden toothpick. You'll quickly 'anneal' it so it will be invisible. The only 'trick' here is to properly prepare your toothpick! Using 600-1000 grit sandpaper, sand the flat end edges and tip smooth and round so it doesn't tear the foil but only *rubs* it.
If you've got panel lines or the like, you *should* be able to use the tip of the toothpick in them without tearing your foil. I've normally got BMF seams all over my cars' chrome trim, but no one has ever been able to tell without a magnifying glass.
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