Trimaster! 25 years ago it was a name to strike awe into the
hearts of aircraft modellers. It was a company whose product was to be
approached in an attitude of genuflection, because it embodied a quality never
seen before. Well – I’m not sure if that was really the case, ‘Tamigawa’ were
pretty sophisticated in the late 80s, and recessed panel lines were not
unknown, if still comparatively rare.
Trimaster burst upon the scene with a flock, a veritable schwarm of German WWII subjects that
captured the attention of the specialist market, focussing on the Fw 190 in
many of its variants, but not ignoring the Me 262 in many of its own, and even
the Me 163 rocket plane. The company had a high production value, a quality
which in the end may have been its downfall, as Trimaster closed its doors
eventually. Its moulds have had considerably longer life, though, being issued
in large volume by Dragon, and in a later incarnation boxed by Italeri.
It was one of these latter that tempted me to “break my
Trimaster virginity,” with the Ta 152 H-1, one of the last and most derived
variants of the Fw 190 airframe, perhaps Kurt Tank’s ‘ninth symphony,’ a
fighter so advanced that it was almost unmanageable by the barely-trained
pilots left by the time it was delivered. Nevertheless, it is remembered for
the extraordinary technical achievement it was.
Given Trimaster’s reputation, I expected big things. I got
an unusual subject with engraved detail and fair parts fit… And that was about
it. I say fair fit, but in many cases it was sloppy, and betrayed poor
engineering appreciation for the realities of building. An instrument panel
attached by a couple of millimetres of its edge would be impossible without
superglue, and is barely practical even so. Sprue gates on the thin ends of
parts, such as the pitot tube, anticipate a rare dexterity on the part of the
modeller to even free the parts intact from the tree, let alone clean them up.
The sliding canopy was conceptually good but engineered to tolerances too
coarse for it to actually work, leaving you with a canopy which neither slides
nor actually fits against the
windscreen. The various parts of the main gear bay lined up so poorly that
major filing and sanding was required for the wing to close at all, and with so
much forcing happening it is unsurprising that the upper wing halves did not
snug down accurately enough to avoid “overbite” at the tips, one way or
another.
Add to that Italeri’s often vague instructions and
indifferent decals, and you have a recipe for a lot of work to get a decent
result. I ended up leaving some parts off – two oblique braces in the gear bay,
to be added from the outside after main assembly, for instance – the plans gave
few clues as to how they fit. Likewise, the aft-most antenna under the fuselage
had no locator hole and the plans made no mention of opening one until it was
essentially too late. Okay, I could have taken a needle and drill to the
centreline of a perfectly mated, flushed and painted fuselage and made a hole,
but at what risk? Likewise, the two short indicators that rose through the
wings to tell the pilot the gear was locked down had no locator holes either,
when finally examined in close detail, and were left off for the same reason.
The main gear struts were moulded with the shock absorber in the fully extended
– unloaded – position, giving the aircraft a distinctly nose-high attitude,
though if they had been moulded compressed the moraine antenna on the underside
would have barely cleared the ground. A small brace piece in the tailwheel
assembly had no attachment points, and the plans gave few hints… The exhausts
were moulded to be attached from the inside, but fitted so curiously, on long
mounting lugs, that they would have resided entirely inside the compartment,
while in reality they should be entirely outside.
I made a series of modifications and simplifications
(alright, omissions) to get the job done. The exhausts I replaced with the
Quickboost parts for Tamiya’s Fw 190 D-9, which needed some modification and
clever use of styrene stripstock to mount them, but looked a lot better
(although the resin of the parts is so fine on the open exhaust throats that it
in fact broke away in many places, almost nullifying the object of improving a
defect.) I added Eduard etched harness in the cockpit, a basic improvement that
is pretty much second nature these days, then did my best to wrestle the beast
into submission.
This finally involved replacing many decals with generic
insignia, swastikas and data from an Aeromaster sheet, using the H-1 data and
individual aircraft codes from the Italeri sheet but omitting the wing walk
dashed lines as it appeared the decals were silvering badly, and, as I had seen
the same subject depicted minus these markings, I felt justified in leaving
them out. The same with the loading chart data on the outside of the gear bay
doors – the decal as supplied is too large to fit and the subject is sometimes
seen without them. The red flashes marking the trim tabs were far too large for
the tabs on all tail surfaces so these were painted red by hand. In the end I
did not rig the main radio antenna wire either; after a long process of soft
masking and spraying the three-tone scheme and DOR bands, and wrestling with
panel accents in lines which were inconsistent across the airframe and thus
sometimes unable to hold a wash, I just wanted it finished. The landing gear
reduced me to that state I call “superglue and prayer,” and, while it worked,
it was a close thing. The next day, the
model was in the display case.
I certainly hope Trimaster lifted their game as they went.
Perhaps this was one of their earlier efforts, part of a learning curve. I have
at least 16 other kits which trace their origins to Trimaster in one
incarnation or another, and I do not look forward to a fight like this again.
In contrast, Hobby Boss has virtually copied their engineering in some aspects
for their D- and C-series 190s, but tightened the tolerances until it works
correctly. Not quite shake and bake kits, but close, and definitely playing the
big guys from Shizuoka City at their own game.
I’ll have a review of Hobby Boss’s D-9 at a later date, and
it will be written in light of my experiences on this current model, as a bench
mark for the changes a quarter of a century makes in the state of this
particular art and science. At the end of the day, I have a Ta 152 which looks
good among its brethren in the case, the paintjob is attractive, and in many
cases I can justify my choices at a research level rather than one of slack
modelling, and that’s a good note to close on.
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