..our club here in East Kent is displaying at Telford Scale Model World for the first time. Table set up finished this afternoon..
Hello and welcome to my blog!
An aircraft enthusiast and ex-airline dispatcher, my main interests are 72nd scale kits (not exclusively) WW II aviation, F-4 Phantoms, Fokker Triplanes and military history. I try and post regularly and build as many new-tool Airfix kits as possible, such as the 48th Sea Vixen seen here. Lets go!
..our club here in East Kent is displaying at Telford Scale Model World for the first time. Table set up finished this afternoon..
..and David at East Kent Scale modellers has come up with the desert scheme in the box ..
.. some painting and masking job that! As David put it;
"..Having done that, my next step is to cover it in mud. Still not sure if I've built an ambulance, an ice cream van or a portable circus tent.."
And an 'embed' from twitter;
my build of the @Airfix 1/35 K2Y Ambulance will be appearing in Tamiya Model Magazine 326, December 2022.
— Spencer Pollard's Kit Box (@spencepollard) October 13, 2022
I really enjoyed this kit and hope that you enjoy seeing the completed model! :) pic.twitter.com/8Jfhoy0PlK
Two recent completions of the Airfix HS 125 Dominie as built by David and Dale at East Kent Scale Modellers. Released a while back in the 'Vintage Classic' range, the original kit/box art dates from 1973. Dale's burnt out wreck represents the machine as seen at RAF Manston's fire dump - and a view of the 'real' wreck at Manston (third picture down).
a few photos of our display table - East Kent Scale Modellers - at the Hawkinge Battle of Britain museum today.
Medway Modellers had an impressive table which featured the massive 1/32nd scale HK Models Lanc and plenty of other beautiful models. According to Ben who built it, the Lancaster took two years and six months to complete. One thing I learnt - note the absence of any exhaust stain on the outside stack of the outer engine. This is due to the wing dihedral...
..and a rare view of the museum's ongoing Heinkel He 111 restoration - not a CASA but a genuine Heinkel build that went to Spain and survived.
A 'walkaround' of the RAF Museum's P-51 which I photographed on a recent trip up to London - slightly strange to see a P-51 in a museum...
Wing Commander Roland 'Bee' Beamont's Tempest V, R-B JN 751, on the airfield at Newchurch village, Kent, June 1944....
Here is my completed new-tool 1/72 nd Airfix Tempest V and a few more pics from a recent visit to the RAF Museum. Not much to say about the kit, goes together easily enough. The undercarriage is a little complex but no issues. Pictures from Hendon show the 'tricky' door arrangement well replicated on the model. I painted the gear bay and the inside of the gear doors green, as seen on the Hendon example. Airfix seem to have omitted paint details for this area of the kit. However Airfix don't appear to have got the wheels correct as mentioned in the previous post - the five spoke wheels have the smaller hub. I have to say as well that the stripe decals don't work - there are too many 'bulges' and shapes to lay them over that they won't settle down - even if cut in strategic locations. I ended up painting the white areas and cutting the black stripes from the decal. "R-B" is of course the machine assigned to Roland Beamont. Note how the exhaust staining on the 'real' machine goes all the way back to the tailplane. I had no intention of replicating that exactly since in model form it would look 'wrong'!
Newchurch - three miles west of Dymchurch on the south Kent coast - was opened as an 'advanced landing ground' to the first squadrons of Spitfires in July 1943 to escort US bombers based in East Anglia. In April 1944 squadrons of Spitfires, Typhoons and Tempests arrived, providing air cover during the ‘D-Day’ landings. Later in June 1944 the Tempests were ordered to deal with the new threat of the V1 flying bombs (Doodlebugs). The first Doodlebug shot down by the Newchurch Wing was on 16th June and the final tally shot down by the Newchurch Wing was 638. After months of intense activity, when the threat posed by the V1s had subsided, the Wing were moved on to other duties. In September 1944 the site was returned to agriculture.
Below a silent film shot in 1944 showing operations and daily life at Newchurch ALG featuring Beamont and his R-B. It was almost certainly shot to provide material for the RAF film about the defence against the V1. A single click to view here...
Post-war TT 5 (target tug) version of the Tempest as seen at the RAF museum last weekend.