I seem to be having a good year for moving along projects
that have been hanging around half done. Five or six years ago I started a
Tamiya Corsair with the intention of doing a Salvadorean bird from the “100
Hours War” of 1969, and all was looking good when I ran into a snag with the
wings. The wing fold mechanism is perfect if you want to build her with the
wings up, but building down, the issue of eliminating a highly visible gap is a
challenge, and Tamiya’s engineering, while strong, is deceptive, in that you
better have that alignment just so when you lock up the main anchoring parts,
or you’ll have anchored it in the wrong place.
Guess what? Yup. I got the left wing fine, the right wing
had a noticeable gap, and by the time I realised what was happening, the
superglue was like a rock. What to do?
Well, I put it back in its box for a few years, isn’t that
what you usually do? I took it out and pondered the problem a few times, and
the last time I got the wing a bit straighter with much pushing and pulling and
clamping and superglue, but it was still not right – no matter how close I got
it, the torsion effect meant the glue would never hold and the gap would open
up once more.
Could I tolerate a Tamiya kit with a shonky wing joint? Hmm
… not really. I even considered punching a hole through the wing at that point
and calling it battle-damaged, a nice flak burst through the trouble spot would
disguise it fine. I recently decided to have one more fiddle with it and found
the right wing to be loose anyway. I wiggled it a bit, developed some play on
it and at last just snapped the damned thing away. The left wing snapped off
too in the handling, but it glued directly back on fine.
A piece of the inner bulkhead of the wing stub snapped clean
away too, and that seemed to fix the alignment problem, as the wing then
snugged up to the mating line fine. Certainly on the top of the wing: I made
the concession that a less perfect mate-up on the underside was acceptable. I
also decided to build fresh for the Salvadorean plane, and go with a standard
WWII midnight blue, using the famous VF-84 scheme in the kit, for two reasons –
the dark blue scheme requires much less handling and would better obscure the
joint, hopefully, than the four tone camo; and it would be far less work to do.
The plane had basically been waiting to crest the hill and run to the finish
for years, it was even all masked up. So, the quicker the better.
I offered up the errant wing with superglue and it mated
acceptably. A small piece of plastic had snapped away from the skin on the top
surface, so this was very carefully filled and sanded, then it was on with other
prep. For instance, the Salvadorean bird had not carried long range tanks so
the model was built clean, to do VF-84 in early 1945 she would need the twin
tanks under the inner wings. I located the holes by the minor visible blemishes
in the plastic of the outer skin, drilled them through and opened them up with
files. Another element of WWII configuration was the radio-fit, which required
the mast behind the cockpit, deleted in the 60s with the advent of more
powerful radios, and this also was added after the fact.
Then I tackled the paintwork, the orange-yellow cowl ring,
interior green over the canopy, and so forth. This is very straightforward, and
I tried the kit decals. They were thin and opaque, with true whites, but
shatter-prone, which caused some cussing. More than cussing, I aborted after a
couple of major decals and sorted through my stash to find the same unit’s
markings (VF-84, USS Bunker Hill, February 1945) on an early Aeromaster sheet, and used those. It required some fine
tuning, removal of a bad one in a prominent place, respraying and clear
coating, indeed more work than I anticipated, but challenge seems to be the
spice of the hobby, and it was okay in the end.
The stencil data came from the kit sheet and went on fine, though the wing walks were also absent from the Aeromaster sheet and I omitted them as the kit items shattered immediately and I was right out of patience as far as masking and spraying them was concerned. Maybe one day in the future… Similarly, the pattern of tape sealing the panels around the fuel tank ahead of the cockpit was also not on the AM sheet and suffered the same exclusion for the same reason.
The stencil data came from the kit sheet and went on fine, though the wing walks were also absent from the Aeromaster sheet and I omitted them as the kit items shattered immediately and I was right out of patience as far as masking and spraying them was concerned. Maybe one day in the future… Similarly, the pattern of tape sealing the panels around the fuel tank ahead of the cockpit was also not on the AM sheet and suffered the same exclusion for the same reason.
I did some exhaust stains on the underside in ruddy earth tones pigment, and allowed some natural metal chips and scratches to gather around the radiators, then used a graphite pencil to create paint loss at panel lines around the cockpit and access hatches, though I don’t see it showing up in photographs – I may have to be more aggressive with that.
This is my first Corsair in 1:48th scale, though
I did the same subject in 1:72nd scale back in the 1980s as part of
my early romance with the bent-wing bird from Vought. The kit was, in the end,
more complicated and challenging than I anticipated, as Tamiya has such a
shake’n’bake reputation, and the reviews of this kit were so glowing when it
first came out. I’ll build it again, for sure, but be more cautious in a few
places.
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