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red Dog

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Everything posted by red Dog

  1. Rather than keeping the huge block or resin for the inner radiator I cut the front and rear face away from the resin part and glued them on the kit's part for the original radiator. The extra radiator was assembled in the same manner but I used 0.75mm plasticard to "copy" the kit's part that I am obviously missing. It's a bit messy but Nothing is visible from the oustide. The wheel wells received a little bit of detailling with platic strips and the radiator are puttied in place.
  2. The MkIX conversion adds another big radiator under the wing. Both radiators are provided in resin but the bottom wing need to be adapted for fitting the second radiator. I started by marking the position of the resin part and then milled a layer of plastic to insert the new radiator. The panels were all closed on the top and bottom wing. As you can see from the picture below, I decided to cut the flaps to display them out. the flap Indicator panel was also opened from the top wing. The second gun is not installed and the gun ejector has been filled.
  3. Thanks guys, Don't worry about the tail wheel 109Ace, it's a minor detail very easily overcome. I agree your price was definitely a bargain considering the weight of the resin, and your service sending these was great I'm not bothered by challenge when I build models, I'm not after tamiya style no putty model. If I may just offer two things for your set. It's simply adding a note in the pack with a few basic information about the left/right part and what to do about the original parts to install the set. It's not critical, it would just save a bit of head scratching when mating the set to the model wings. In any way, thanks for that set, it serve it's purpose .
  4. I was lucky to bring a wheel insert set from my last visit to the US. The set was just announced here on LSP by 109Ace before I departed and the parts were waiting for me when I got there As you probably all know the Airfix wheel bay are not closed and you can see the inner wings so this set was a great opportunity to save a bit of time closing the side of the wheel well myself with plasticard. The set has the added bonus of being available with resin wheels and as I don't really fancy rubber wheels at all, these will be welcome eventhough if they are just copies of the rubber kit's wheel. Strangely enough I didn't get a tail wheel with my order, but just two main wheels. So somehow I'll be stuck with one small rubber wheel anyway When I came back home, I immediately started working on the spitfire wings test fitting the new wheel inserts. The quality is a bit rough and not devoid of air bubble. the surfaces are not as smooth as Zactoman's resin, but that can be easily fixed with a quick sanding and puttying session. First thing to do was to remove the thick resin blocks, quickly done on a sheet of 180 sanding paper and a lot of rotating motions After removing the block, I started to wonder if these parts were sided or not. I tried different configuration and ended up making my mind on which part to use on each side and marked them (when you constantly dry fit, after a while you really don't know anymore … ) If they are supposed to be side relevant, then a quick mark would tremendously help Being so excited to get back to modelling after the business trip I confess I didn't check before sanding the parts … Once the wheel inserts are in the wings, you can't place the hispano guns anymore, but that's no big deal for me as they are really ugly and I will use the master's canons anyway. So I don't really need them. Strangely enough the inserts don't seem to be symetrical as one gun ejector is covered (right in the above picture) by the insert while the other is left free… (left one) The gear can't be attached if the resin inserts are left as they are. The proxxon will be used to mill resin out to allow the gear struts to be attached in their correct location. Note the surgery (just one clean cut) to recover the gun ejector on the right side ! You can't really display the wheels retracted either, that was made well clear before buying the set. The wheel will conflict with the side wall. No factor for me either as this one will be displayed on the dispersal and not in flight as I usually do I also had a bit of trouble to decide of the two pin and the top gear retaining plate glued on the inner top wings were supposed to be left in place or removed. After test fitting I decided to remove them as I thought the purpose of the inserts was to cover the full height of the wing internal and one of the two pins were clearly in the way. Yet, once I removed them, I realised the inserts were not touching the top wing unless I compressed the wing hard (messing their shape). No big deal but that made me realise that maybe, just maybe I shouldn't have cut these pins.Oh, well, too late to address this now so let's move on ...
  5. Great Tonka, I really like the grey variation and the weathering (special mention for the scratches on the top intakes !!. Very nicely done. !!
  6. Thanks Lothar, I have seen some great Spit builds in here lately, if this one turns a quarter as good as those, then i'll be happy. Warbirds are usually not my strongest point, but I'll do my best
  7. The heritage set I am using has been stored for quite a long while and I may have missing parts. The resin is not void of air bubbles but the extended nose, the 4 bladed prop, the second radiator and the tail parts are really helpful for this conversion. Not that it will be an easy one because the fit of the resin nose is really bad, the small air intake should hide a bit of that disaster but still ... On top the problem is not so huge but will require quite a bit of adjusting to fit. Needless to say the engine won't fit. No big deal there as when you build both the 1/24 airfix and the 1/32 tamiya engine at the same time, you'd be ashamed to display the 1/24 engine anyway. In all fairness there is a huge technology gap between these two so they can't really be compared IMHO. Let's just say that I am not a fan of opened panels on Spitfire and I rather want to display the elegant lines of the aircraft
  8. I started this one a few weeks ago alongside a Tamiya 1/32 MkXVI thinking I could use the tamiya model as a source of minor detailling for the 1/24 model. The conversion to MkIX will be done with the help (...) of the old heritage set Other goodies will be used such as resin seat, some trumpeter parts I could gather, Airscale instrument panel, Master cannons and custom mask made by DN models Hopefully I will be able to make a Mk IX from 349 sqn : GE - L serial PT723 clipped wing as illustrated in the next picture
  9. IMHO , the prop should be visible. There is always something visible enough when a prop is turning If you don't place the prop, the viewer often has the feeling that Something is missing. To me no prop and blurred prop are no good enough compromises. That's the Reason why I prefer for the prop to turn whenever it is necessary for my model, most of the time, I put a small motor in there
  10. Awesome model realisation. An old bird with a modern paint. Very attractive and inspiring !!
  11. Outstanding model and build technique. I just went through the 27 pages of your WIP and I thank you for that. I learned a few things along your WIP which will be put to good use as I am currently working on a restored MKXVI in 1/32.
  12. the only Am I know of is the heritage aviation mkIX conversion, which I'm currently building
  13. I'm in old Europe but will be in Baltimore next Friday. I was going to order one from ebay and have it delivered in the US, but I see there's a 15 days handling time... I'm there often enough so no big deal, but would you prefer I contact you directly? I don't do facebook though, sorry But I can arrange it through MP and paypal direct... Let me know
  14. Awesome Mig-23. Thanks for sharing the results. It's a great inspiration
  15. The academy (Sufa) converts into a F-16D MLU https://reddogsmodels.wordpress.com/2011/09/22/132-f-16-mlu-converted-from-132-academy-sufa/
  16. another vote for the magic scale modelling motors. They are very small and fitted exceptionally well the B-25 engines
  17. i built a KA-6D in 1/32 with 4 drop tanks I also read that electric intruder post saying that the tanks were awful, so i compared the trumpeter A-6 and the hasegawa tanks Well to me it's not that awful. Yes there's a difference, but barely visible Length is the same, front section is the same, the hasegawa are just thicker at the end section. Something I could really live with; So in the end, I sticked to the trumpeters. Note also the missing details at the rear tip, I made these with decals You biggest problem is not the tank actuallly, it's the way the tanks are attached to the pylon. The intruder have a very noticeable downward angle when loading stores, including the wing bags. Trumpeter wants you to load them flat and that is a real eye attractive mistake. That's the trumpy way: and after the correction: Hope that helps, have fun with the KA-6D, it's a great kit. But it needs a bit of love, especially converting to tanker beware wing fence and DECM antennas More info in my WIP
  18. When I researched the same question when doing this one i found out that it was indeed possible, but both small doors at mid section should be up, not only the one with the raised wing. Like in this picture, clearly seen on the starboard wing in red
  19. You mean, you did THIS in 6 days? That's insane Nice colours, typically what I would use as well rather than the dull 3 grey tone on the instructions, much more colourful. I like it
  20. She's incredible. Great work !! what catched my eye was the shoe marks around the cockpit, i tried to make them but never was satisfied with my result. I'd be satisfied if i could have done half the quality of yours !!
  21. Poor in quantity but certainly not in quality. that L-39 looks gorgeous
  22. I made a side by side comparison a few years ago and maybe you can get a few information about the revell single seater in there: https://reddogsmodels.wordpress.com/2012/06/18/132-ef-2000-revelltrumpeter-comparison-side-by-side-report/ Out of memory, the APU was really bad. The intake are a mess but you know that already. For the rest It build like a eurofighter and you can turn it into a nice model: Here is the conclusion I came up with at the time: To compare both I scored some items, the low scores of the revell column may provide more information about where I felt the Revell kit came short Hope that helps - it's pretty personnal and in no way am I a eurofighter expert.
  23. Yep, this I knew. I wondered how the pilot would see the amber ones though as you can't from dead astern. But them being cleared to contact, it doesn't matter Mine will be green, just need to figure out a bright enough paint.
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