Monday 26 December 2011

new tool Revell Junkers Ju 88 A-4 (3)

Build proceeds apace - or rather at snails pace. Plenty of Green Putty on all major joins, which I guess is the price to pay for the kit's relative complexity and modular design/parts break down. Personally I dislike to see Ju 88 wings in eight parts although the fit everywhere is pretty good with only a light sanding required on the engine nacelles. Rather than apply putty and sand, I apply and then wipe away excess with cotton bud and nail polish remover/acetone. Engines and wing flaps are built up and painted separately. I wasn't quite sure how to approach the painting of the Jumo radiators - in the end I've opted for grey primer, a black wash and a little light drybrushing to bring out all the neat detail..



Friday 9 December 2011

new tool Revell Junkers Ju 88 A-4 (2)

Some progress on the cockpit and fuselage assembly. Lots of small and fiddly parts! General fit is good. Added some scratch belts and buckles. Utilised the kit-supplied instrument panel decal which ideally needs cutting into three parts before application. Completed fuselage in the lower pic fits well which is fortunate since it comprises four main parts - two fuselage 'sides' and a top and bottom. The fuselage 'bottom' features a bomb aimers position and bomb sight.








below; Bomben-Ziel Gerät - bomb sight - painted on the sprue, slots into the bomb aimer's 'floor' ( handbook drawing above from Bernard und Graefe's 'Vom Original zum Modell - Ju 88')






Saturday 3 December 2011

new tool Revell Junkers Ju 88 A-4 bomber (kit 04672) and Zvezda Ju 88 G-6 (2) - Ju 88 walkaround detail photos




As with their new 1:32 kits, the new tool Revell Junkers Ju 88 A-4 Schnellbomber in the one true scale appears to set new standards. The box itself is huge with its striking - albeit apparently spurious- KG 30 artwork, presumably based on the 'celebrated' Piraeus raid which took place on the evening of 6 April 1941 as described in his memoir by the Staffelkapitän of 7./ KG 30 'Hajo' Herrmann flying 4D+AR - a little early for a Mediterranean A-4 perhaps. So much for the box art. The kit itself is impressive - when Revell state that their new Ju 88 features a 'super-detailed' cockpit and an extensively equipped interior they are not exaggerating - no fewer than 13 of the 50-odd build stages are devoted to the cockpit and forward fuselage, including a detailed and 'poseable' C-Stand ventral Bola. The side panel detail, the consoles and radio gear are all superb and even feature various levers moulded perfectly in situ. Rudder pedals are also separate parts -must be a first in this scale- and a decent representation of the compass also feature. A nicely-detailed bombsight extends down to the cupola bomb aiming window. Rather than just include 'generic' machine guns an attempt has been made to accurately represent the various different MGs in the cockpit area, ie MG 15/17, MG 81 and MG 81Z, although the sights are solid plastic. Anything else in this scale would have been totally impractical. Total parts count is not given anywhere on or in the box - I've seen figures ranging from 125 to 140, although the ordnance is numbered in the 230s. There are nearly 100 items on the decal sheet, including the side window angle of attack sight lines. There are also decals for the external engine instrument clusters on both engines. Featuring separate control surfaces and landing flaps and perfectly recessed panel lines, this kit is graded at Series 4 level complexity. The clear parts are bagged separately and look first class. The rotating LL-K81 Bola MG mounts for the rearward firing MGs are separate clear parts. A couple of low spots, more personal bugbears - the main wheels are moulded in two halves and the KG 30 decal option, as mentioned above, appears to be fictitious, apparently based on a 30-year old John Weal profile - or perhaps on some undocumented personal recollection. Having hunted through my references (including the impressive AirDoc monograph and the three recent Kagero volumes) and researched some of Kagero's decal subjects I can tell you that I failed to find anything quite this colourful. More to the point there were few if any A-4s in the Balkan/Crete/Med theatre as a recent thread on the LEMB indicates. In the first of the Ju 88 Kagero monographs there are decals for a nice KG 30 machine with areas of yellow on the airframe - this is an A-5 coded 4D+VH. The other kit decal option is a sand-brown LG 1 machine. Click on the images for a closer view and carry on scrolling down for some reference images of the forward fuselage and selected cockpit handbook photos..not all of the followng are A-4s of course. ..

Here are some pics of the parts and the cockpit assembly - or at least the first couple of stages. Some of the smallest parts I can recall on a 1:72 kit - perhaps a little too many of them for me (approx 25 ?) including rudder pedals. Believe it or not, the two rudder pedals are not on the same sprue either. Nor do they locate to the cockpit floor very well and I've supported mine with a couple of thin strips of plastic card. Placement of parts is a little haphazard and the instructions aren't much help as the parts numbering on the instructions goes adrift from stage 2. A17 is actually A6 in stage 2! No locating holes on A3 (port side console cockpit) is a pain to say the least. These are minor issues though. The cockpit is superbly detailed right down to the observer's jump-seat. Black undercoat/preshade and a bit of dry-brushing brings out the great detail on these parts..click on the images to get in closer.









Above;  seats added - all the cockpit will need is some champagne bottle foil belts and some dry-brushing to bring out the detail. For scale the coins are a 20 cent & 2p piece. Probably the best 72nd scale cockpit I've seen out of the box ..at least since the Academy Junkers Ju 87 G.

Now that I've got a set of new engines from AIMS I can get on with the Zvezda G-6 which I last looked at in February on this blog.  In terms of detail the Zvezda kit doesn't stand up well to comparison with this superb new Revell release. The AIMS engines importantly add a far better representation of the supercharger intakes as this view shows..just have to work out now how to attach them to the cowling..any ideas?






Test shot build of the Revell kit photographed by Rowan Gough at Telford.















Two views of an early A-variant cockpit showing the instrument panel and forward-firing MG (above) and the pilot's seat and control column (below, left)





Note the additional defensive side-ways firing MG 15 in the upper rear cockpit roof glazing in the picture above, the so-called B-Stand Zusätzliche Schußwaffe and two handbook images showing the staggered lay out of these supplementary twin drum MG 15s in the B-Stand interior position operated by the Beobachter (observer) in this view looking forward.











Two views above of an A-4 having its inboard wing tanks refueled. A good view of the rotating LL-K81 MG mounts