Bruce_Crosby Posted June 16, 2022 Share Posted June 16, 2022 Hi Guys, Pull up your armchairs for another long saga. I finally finished the 1/32 scale PCM Ta-152C-1 kit earlier this year and it left me excited but disappointed as well, I just knew it was wrong in so many ways. So I've pulled out the second kit intending to tart it up a bit. The basic kit will get a lot of rebuilt parts like guns, bits of undercarriage, things like that, some basic engineering to actually get the plastic to line up and then the big problem: The wings! the cockpit during a test fit. I thinned the seat a few years ago along with another 8 D-9 kit seat. The usual plastic strips to align and locate the fuselage halves - no pins on the kit at all. Some rudimentary research and a lot of guesses and here's the lower and upper wing changes I thought would be necessary. At this point its too late to make suggestions! This is the underside. And the topside. Underwing after scribing, filling, sanding and swearing a lot! Wing top almost ready to go. Part one done. Hope you like it so far Bruce Crosby Paul in Napier, Landrotten Highlander, sandokan and 14 others 17 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Troy Molitor Posted June 16, 2022 Share Posted June 16, 2022 Nice. Looking good Bruce. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bruce_Crosby Posted June 16, 2022 Author Share Posted June 16, 2022 Here's part two. The undercarriage on the PCM kit is fragile with poorly defined locations and fixings. Some points were drilled and 0.4mm brass wire pins added to locate things a bit better. Here are the actuators with drilled eye ends to fit on the pinned main legs. The pivot posts on the spar were drilled and more 0.4mm rod superglued into place Something like this? Pitot tube from Albion Alloys Micro Brass Tubing. Bruce Crosby nmayhew, TAG, Martinnfb and 14 others 16 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nmayhew Posted June 16, 2022 Share Posted June 16, 2022 Nice one Bruce. looking forward to seeing this one come along Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alain Gadbois Posted June 17, 2022 Share Posted June 17, 2022 Excellent start! I have info on the peculiar geometry of the louvers around the nose cowl if you’re interested. Alain Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Stambaugh Posted June 17, 2022 Share Posted June 17, 2022 Wise move with the metal pins to locate the undercarriage. I recently finished PCM's Fw190A and although not impressed with the exterior; the resin makes the kit. Will follow your build Bruce. Thanks for sharing. John Citadelgrad 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bruce_Crosby Posted June 17, 2022 Author Share Posted June 17, 2022 (edited) One thing i realised was the radiator cowling was wrong and decided to do something about it. The flaps overlap with small triangles - PCM has them in the correct locations but they are recessed and the should be proud. Once you know this and look at all the photos again it becomes bloody obvious. No point in looking at the H as its a completely different radiator, cowling etc, Radiator cowling assembled from the kit. You can see the recessed triangles. I added thin plasticard triangles that are just slightly raised. They look thick because I've drawn a marker pen across each "Open" side so I didn't sand down the wrong part. Edited June 17, 2022 by Bruce_Crosby spelling dodgem37, LSP_Kevin, Paul in Napier and 5 others 7 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LSP_Kevin Posted June 17, 2022 Share Posted June 17, 2022 Lovely work, Bruce! So glad you decided to post it here. Kev Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thunnus Posted June 17, 2022 Share Posted June 17, 2022 Very nice... not often do you see Ta152C build! Are you sure the cowling triangles are raised? I thought they were slightly recessed. The photo is of a Ta152H-0... sandokan 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bruce_Crosby Posted June 17, 2022 Author Share Posted June 17, 2022 4 hours ago, Thunnus said: Very nice... not often do you see Ta152C build! Are you sure the cowling triangles are raised? I thought they were slightly recessed. The photo is of a Ta152H-0... OK. Some basic facts. That's a Jumo 213 with an annular radiator. It came as a complete power egg with radiator and cowlings as a piece part. 190D series had a circular radiator. The Ta152C series ran a DB 603 engine with a completely different radiator. Still annular but the whole assembly is different. The cooling gills are overlapping, visible in photos of 600 series in museums and if you look carefully at published photos is really obvious when you know what your looking at. I haven't uploaded any from my iPhone to Flickr yet though. Stefano, Paul in Napier, dodgem37 and 3 others 2 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bruce_Crosby Posted June 17, 2022 Author Share Posted June 17, 2022 More tomfoolery with the Ta, this time the tail. PCM gives plain butt joints, flat plastic to plastic for tailplanes to fuselage. Not good! My fix was to drill the airframe end of the joint with a couple of holes from the outside. Then using a lot of skill and cunning (you won't say it so I will!) held the tail plane in the correct position and drilled back thru the holes into the flat end of the said tail plane. shove in some plastic rod, in this case 1.5 mmfrom Evergreen and we have a fairly secure tail plane. Only a few minutes work but well worth the effort. D.B. Andrus, thierry laurent, dodgem37 and 7 others 10 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bruce_Crosby Posted June 18, 2022 Author Share Posted June 18, 2022 Hi Guys, When it comes to the cowling, I spent a lot of time online and going thru books to see what is really there. I had assistance from Steve McCready in Australia and I'm going to use some of his photo revisions here. Drawing from Hitchcock's book, Eagle Pubs. A DB600 series cowling in a museum, clearly showing the triangular overlaps. Steve McCready's take on the above. This makes sense now. Another DB600 series engine. The overlaying triangles are pretty clearly shown here. Steve McCready's second sketch. Now have a look at this with fresh eyes. Here's my modified cowling with gill 5 having two triangles. Top view. I still need to engrave lines for gills 1 and 10 just outboard of the gun troughs. So that's the justifications for making the cowling the way I have. If you've got better information, share it but don't waste time with pictures of the Jumo 213 and the Ta152H, it just isn't the same animal. Regards, Bruce Crosby nmayhew, Troy Molitor, Stefano and 5 others 7 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thunnus Posted June 18, 2022 Share Posted June 18, 2022 Thank you for that thorough explanation. Mine was not a statement but merely a question and you answered it. Don't worry... I will not be wasting any more time on your posts. Citadelgrad 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nmayhew Posted June 18, 2022 Share Posted June 18, 2022 Thanks for the very detailed explanation Bruce, much appreciated - looking good. @Thunnus I think the tone of Bruce’s response to your picture shouldn’t be construed as rude - he just knows what he’s talking about. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Citadelgrad Posted June 18, 2022 Share Posted June 18, 2022 38 minutes ago, nmayhew said: Thanks for the very detailed explanation Bruce, much appreciated - looking good. @Thunnus I think the tone of Bruce’s response to your picture shouldn’t be construed as rude - he just knows what he’s talking about. Not to jump in the middle, but its certainly possible to be both. Thunnus 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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