Jump to content

Ayovan

LSP_Members
  • Posts

    608
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Posts posted by Ayovan

  1. 11 hours ago, vince14 said:

    I saw this video on You Tube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CyLAAPVrT7g

     

    Capture0.jpg

     

    There's a few B-25's, a couple of B-29's, a Buckeye, and plenty more interesting things there. The narrator only says that it's in southern California - anyone have any idea where it is?

    Yes, it's just south of Salton Sea off hwy 78 in Ocotillo Wells. We ride there every so often. Catch a drywash headed south, just east of Cahilla trail on the south side of hwy 78 for about 3 miles. Not really much there, but it's a riding destination. It's also more or less under the Blue Angles practice area. We have watched them on several occasions.

    HCXHJk.jpg

  2. I haven't been able to get too much done the last 2 weeks. I have been winding down on a job at Company3 movie studios in Hollyweird. Those people have more money than brains... Finished today. Glad that one is over with.

    Got a little of the cockpit done, but need to scratch out the armor for the pilot, since the only decent photo I have of EP706, there is no headrest. I'll have to go down to the LHS and get some sheet styrene to make a new one. The slot for the seatbelt shoulder harness looks to be in the wrong place too, based on photos.

  3. After ordering and reading several books, and searching for all I could find online about the subject of Malta Spitfires,

    It does appear EP706 was delivered to Malta in factory applied desert camo, aboard HMS Furious, Operation Bellows, 11 August 1942. After that it becomes rather vauge about where and when what planes were repainted and in what colors, with everything from improvised paint jobs, to Air Ministry Orders. By fall of 1942, the RAF on Malta went from being on the defense to being on the offense, and camo pretty much became a non issue.  The closest I can find to a semi definitive answer for EP706 is a snippet in Malta Spitfire V's- 1942. It refers to the color for the codes on EP706 to be grey and not yellow, per one of Beurlings ground crew. It also refers to a photo of EP706 in, Malta: The Spitfire Year 1942, with the kill markings and says it appears to be in desert camo.

    IDK, but Im doing desert camo overpainted with a light coat of extra dark sea grey...

    I think....lol

    Andy

  4. 23 hours ago, PTR said:

    I wandered around the US Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio last week.  Every time I walk in there I learn something new.  Highly recommended for a visit if you are in the area. 

    I became fascinated with the XB-70 so maybe someone here can give me some insight on best kit available of this beast.  It looks like HPH has a 1/48 scale, never bought from them so not sure about shipping from CZ. Also if my math is correct its 4 feet long! The more, sane approach might be 1/72, less expensive and will fit on the work bench. 

    If anyone has any insight on all of this, its much appreciated.

     

    A 1/48 XB-70 would be huge. My Dad took me to the rollout at Edwards when I was a small kid. It was ginormous to me then. A few years ago I went to Wright Patterson and saw the XB-70. It was still ginormous.

     

  5. 10 hours ago, DugyB said:

    Well goodness,  looking a those pics whatever camo colour you choose you’d better make sure its dusty as all hell in the end, those planes look filthy, rightfully so I’d say too…..:mellow:

    No kidding... those are some dirty birds.  The F-86 I just finished got zero weathering. This one will probably get weathered within an inch of it's life.

  6. 6 hours ago, Gazzas said:

    Spitfire-MkVb-RAF-249Sqn-TH-Qrendi-Malta

     

     

     

     

    I have seen this photo (in one of my books) but in black and white. I have not seen it in color before. This is one of the pictures that leads me to believe a quick and dirty paint job was applied over the desert camo, with just enough coverage that the demarcation from dark earth to middle stone is still visible. If you look at the third aircraft in the background, there is a significant shine to it that indicates, to my eye anyway, that the entire upper surface got painted over, and not just the middle stone portions. Like many and better before me...just pure speculation on my part.

     

     

     

  7. I have read a few ideas and suggestions. Extra Dark Sea Grey, Dark Slate Grey, and Deep Mediterranean Blue, or even possibly what could have been a concoction of what was on hand at the maintenance depot. The impression I get from what I have read is EP706 got a quick and nasty paint job at the maintenance depot on Malta.

    I'm leaning towards a light coat of Extra Dark Sea Grey over the desert camo, to where the camo demarcation lines are just visible, Azure Blue underside, with light Sea Grey T-L codes

    I might have bitten off a little more than I can chew here. :doh:

     

    Andy

     

  8. Malta spitfire colors.......What a kettle of worms!

    The more I read the more convoluted the subject becomes. Nobody seems to have a definitive answer as to which airplanes were what colors and when. Some say EP706 left England painted from the factory in desert camo, and that she was still painted that way while aboard HMS Furious while being shipped to Malta. After that it gets a bit confusing with much conjecture, and very little photographic evidence. 

     

     

     

    The quest continues.....

     

  9. From what I gather, EP706 arrived in Malta clad in desert camo, but received a repaint shortly there after. I have seen a picture of her on the flight line in desert camo, but that seems to be very short lived. So now I need to figure out if it was extra dark sea grey/azure as the decals I have depict it, or deep Mediterranean blue/azure.  

     

    These came today. I have "T-L" stencils already, so there won't be much in the way of decals, except the kill markings, and MAYBE the EP706. 

    TTSFkC.jpg

×
×
  • Create New...