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Revell Super Hornet with lessons learned


hpetiers

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Wowzers! What a job you are doing here!    Great work and tenacity shown here...............more than I would have shown to a brand new tool kit for sure. I dont know how many of these will ever get built, but once you get it done, you may have a rare bird!  No one including myself seems to be willing to tackle this mess.

 

You're doing exceptional work here..............Keep going! 

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Great job! It's a no-brainer for me, I will definitely not get this kit. There is just no reason to build it - even with all the work going into it, it will remain inaccurate and most of its only advantage over the Trumpeter kit - the surface detail - is being destroyed during the build process. I'll keep following your build with huge interest and at the same time, I will start hoarding Trumpeter Bugs... 

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hi gents, indeed I am making good use of the fora so far, the trick here really is dry fitting to make sure that you are not going to be surprised when parts are glued.

After all had dried I could finally mount the fuselage top and nose, this time with no stress in the plastic:
DSC08645.jpg
 
around I just need to fill small gaps:
DSC08646.jpg
 
the elevator connection is really sticking out from the fuselage too much, need to sand that down still:
DSC08647.jpgDSC08648.jpg
 
also at the cockpit things align pretty much ok:
DSC08649.jpg
 
I read some things about the nose, it should have a constant radius in the side view, Revell has made a bit of a kink in it. With sanding sticks I have tried to make the radius more constant:
DSC08650.jpg
 
before glueing the wings together I decided to add the outer wings an see how things fit:
DSC08651.jpg
 
Also here is seems that the hinge mechanism is 2 mm too long, causing a gap:
DSC08652.jpg
 
also the lid on the hinge does not fit without taking away material, the manual does not mention it:
DSC08653.jpg
 
so out comes the cutters:
DSC08654.jpg
 
now it starts to fit better, I need to take 2 mm off of the outside hinge lip:
DSC08655.jpg
Edited by hpetiers
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got some work done on the seams, all of them on the assembly so far have been dealt with:

DSC08657.jpg

DSC08658.jpg

[DSC08659.jpg

DSC08660.jpg

and on the bottom side of the fuselage, not too bad:

DSC08661.jpg

 

and I have also assembled all the moving surfaces of the wings:

DSC08662.jpg

 

then continued dry fitting some cockpit parts. the seat was just assembled to compare with the resin version from Aires:

DSC08663.jpg

 

and as others have already found out, the canopy does not fit due to the seat sitting 2 mm too high:

DSC08664.jpg

with the new seat I also need to do something, but the conflict is smaller:

DSC08665.jpg

 

the new seat itself fits without any further adjustments:

DSC08666.jpg

 

I added a Tamiya F-16 pilot in the seat, everything fits almost without any cutting or sanding:

DSC08668.jpg

 

 

Edited by hpetiers
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Hi DonH and 1to1scale, defeat is not what I am risking anymore I think. After having completed the assembly of the fuselage I think that most other things will be easier. Especially now that I have a solution for the landing gear see below.

First I still had to mount the foldable wings. I already knew that I would have to cut the lip on the outside wing part of the hinge, but after glueing the wing halves together I concluded that the lip is also too thick to fit inside the outer wing:

DSC08669.jpg

not so nice Revell....

 

after having sanded the lip thinner, it fit into the slot:

DSC08672.jpg

 

having glued the parts together, top and bottom seam are very ok:
DSC08673.jpg

 

both wings attached, on with the moving surfaces!

DSC08674.jpg

 

the hinge cover, slats and flap covers fit quite well looking from above:

DSC08675.jpg

 

but the slats will make far too large an angle if you mount them without gaps. So I had to leave a rather large gap to make the angle work. this will need to be filled:

DSC08676.jpg

 

though I will mount the flaps after painting, I clamped them temporarily to see how it goes together. at least this fits!

DSC08677.jpg

 

Another possible headache was resolved with the modification of the landing gear. Below to the right the original pieces, they require a lot of cleaning up. However the hinge mechanism could be separated quite easily in order to put them in the fully extended position, assembled to the left bottom. Also the nose landing gear can be easily extended:

DSC08678.jpg 

 

Edited by hpetiers
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Hi Chrish, thanks for your support. Speaking of support I put the aircraft on a temporary stand to see what it looks like, what I have in mind.
IMG-2013.jpg
that is what I am looking for!
IMG_2014.jpg
IMG_2016.jpg
IMG_2019.jpg
 
still need to do more work on the nos wheels as they are standing too far apart. Also the main landing wheels are too square in profile.
All in all the landing gear is not bad, but a bit too skinny. You wonder if Revell had the nerve to deliver the parts for the gear in plastic, they might want to have made the parts at least as thick as in real life. I am not so worried for this one, being up in the air.
IMG_2020.jpg
 
with some final touches on the cockpit, it's almost time to start painting!
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  • 2 weeks later...
...or so I thought I was almost ready for paint. The plastic HUD as supplied by Revell was quite a thorn in the eye, based on which I decided last week to buy the Eduard cockpit set in photo etch for the Trumpeter model. I really did not want to wait for the Revell one to come out, I wanted to start painting soon. Wanting the HUD most I thought that all extra panels that would fit would be a bonus. 
 
Turns out that all parts fit this super bug quite well. So that added another 20 or so parts to my project.
 
Before adding the PE I finished work on the tail surfaces. I already read elsewhere that  they do not fit well, I wanted to reduce the gaps before I would mount them to the fuselage.
The trick I used was to put some Milliput onto the glue surface of the tails: 
DSC08679.jpg
 
then cover the surface by a piece of sandwich plastic foil:
DSC08680.jpg
 
then press the tail into its gap:
DSC08681.jpg
 
 
when the tail was removed, the imprint of the fuselage was in the putty:
DSC08682.jpg
 
after drying I could remove the foil and sand the excess material flush with the tail:
DSC08683.jpg
 
The gap between tail and fuselage is much smaller now:
DSC08685.jpg
 
I also closed the gap between fuselage and stabilizers by adding PS strip:
DSC08691.jpg
 
Next step: The pilot has his arms added and fitted to the position of the stick and throttle. Stick and throttle have been glued to the hands and will not contact the cockpit anymore, but this will be invisible:
DSC08690.jpg
 
Pilot nearly ready for paint, except the addition of the PE shoulder and waist straps:
DSC08692.jpg
 
 
The PE set that I bought had some parts I did not expect to find, turns out that the mesh on the turtle deck is also in there. Even nicer is that it fits quite well on the Revell model. Also the cockpit sidewalls fit well, camouflaging the seam between the upper and lower fuselage:
DSC08693.jpg
 
And now I am really ready for primer!
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during recent evenings I have been busy with paint! taking a step away from my usual 1:72 projects, I must say that the ejection seat and the pilot are already a project of their own.

Here is some pictures. The pre-coloured PE worked quite well even though it was meant for the Trumpeter kit:

DSC08695.jpg

 

DSC08696.jpg

 

time for a layer of matt varnish for everything and some gloss for the visor and I can think about closing up the cockpit!

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I'm starting to see these kits popping up in a lot more shops now, and I can't but help wonder who is going to be the poor one that purchases this kit, I assume that they won't have an understanding of what they're in for. 

The work you've done here is amazing, you shouldn't be required to do this to achieve a good finish on a modern kit, but the work your doing and the results you're getting are great, and enjoyable to watch. 

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