Tag Archives: kits

Halloween Hell Monogram Mold: Corvettes saved?

Update to the Halloween Hell mold disaster:

Halloween Hell: ANGRY GODS PUNISH ME FOR PROCRASTINATING!

Part 4: More Hell for the Xmas Beer Wagon?

More spray paint hell for the Kris Krampus Weihnachten Bier Wagon build? My favorite generic brand spray paint no longer in production!

Part 3: OL’ KRIS KRAMPUS MUST NOT LIKE IT! XMAS BEER WAGON BUILD FROM HELL?

Part 3: Ol’ Kris Krampus must not like it! Xmas Beer Wagon build from Hell?

What’s going on with spray paint?

Part 1:

Part 2:

WHY THE CANADIAN BEER WAGON IS BIGGER!

Angry gods punish me for Procrastinating!

The video doesn’t do a good job of showing the mold growing on the plastic model kits.

Part-1:

Got a nasty surprise when I decided to go through one of my storage tubs in a storage shed. The 40+ years old sheds decided to start leaking this past Winter during the snow melt. Still making scary discoveries even after months of clean-up.

Part-2:

The owl had a blue umbrella!: How LANTIRN killed the N/AW-10, and, what’s wrong with the Trumpeter/Hobby Boss kits?

The N/AW-10 over what looks like the beginning development of California City, near Edwards Air Force Base, 04MAY1979. Photographer not known.

The two seat A-10 had a very short service life, brought to an end by rapid advances in technology, specifically the LANTIRN (Low Altitude Navigation Targeting Infrared Night) pod system.

It was a conversion of the first pre-production A-10 Thunderbolt-2, and was initially called Night/Adverse Weather-10 , or N/AW-10.  But, once the N/AW-10 conversion was completed the nomenclature was changed to YA-10B.

The ‘owl’ nose art has yet to be added.

First flight of the N/AW-10 was 04MAY1979.

Edwards AFB, 04MAY1979, photographer not known.

04MAY1979, photographer not known.

Near Rogers Dry Lake, 04MAY1979. Photographer not known.

04MAY1979, photographer not known.

I read several model building blogs where it’s thought the N/AW-10 was built for the LANTIRN program, but it was actually the LANTIRN program that killed the N/AW-10 before it even got started.  The two seat A-10 required a second crew-member precisely because the targeting pods it used required a separate weapons/targeting systems operator, the LANTIRN system does not.

Freshly painted nose art, no more nose probe.

The N/AW-10 used a large modified weather radar pod under its port wing (inboard) and a large laser-combo-infrared (FLIR) pod mounted centerline.

Laser-combo-FLIR pod.

Modified WX radar pod.

Also, the Pave Penny system (in the small pod below the cockpit on the starboard side) was replaced with a low light TV (LLTV) video camera.

The LANTIRN system uses two pods, but they’re much smaller and can be operated by the pilot.

I worked on the Edwards Air Force Base bombing range in the early 1980s, right after the promise of the LANTIRN killed-off the N/AW-10.   LANTIRN missions were carried out late in the evening, and at night.  As range techs we had to operate the static and portable infrared target boards (IR Boards).  The missions were flown by single seat A-10s, F-16s and I think even an F-16XL.

The portable IR Boards used large towed field generators to create the power to heat them up.

Static IR Board just after completion. Note wires at bottom of adjustable panels. The aluminum triangle on the side is a radar reflector.

The static board was two stories tall and looked like a small drive-in movie screen.  It had movable individually heated vertical panels, one side white, the other black.  We got to sit behind the static panel and watch the low flying airshow.  By the way, being a Army National Guard armor crewman I learned that you can’t hear the A-10 if it’s flying right at you, kind of like you can’t hear the bullet that kills you.

The LANTIRN system itself has finally been outdated for U.S. military use, however, in July 2018 Lockheed-Martin got a $100-million contract to upgrade LANTIRNs being used by foreign air forces.

Many model building blogs point out nit-picky things that are wrong with the Trumpeter and Hobby Boss N/AW-10 kits, mostly stuff that also applies to the single seater.

10JUL1979, photographer not known.

Hobby Boss’ 1:72 owl decals.

My biggest complaint is that the ‘owl’ decals are wrong, being just black outlines, and they were not on both sides of the aircraft.

Trumpeter’s 1:32 owl decals.

1979, photographer not known.

Hobby Boss’ 1:48 owl decals.

Early 1980s, photo by me, AAron B. Hutchins.

During the 1981 Edwards AFB open house I took a photo of the N/AW-10 owl nose art.  It’s not just a black outline.  Official USAF photos also reveal that initially it had a blue umbrella, and it was located only on the port side of the nose.

The first flight of the N/AW was in 1979, photos show a bright colorful owl, blue umbrella, brown feathers, blue eyes and breast shield (also note the nose probe).  My photo, taken a couple of years later, shows the umbrella so faded that you wouldn’t know it was there.

Photo by AAron B. Hutchins, 1981.

The eyes contain the words FLIR and LASER, the breast shield says N/(the slash is in the form of a lightening bolt)AW and an additional letter I can’t make-out,  and it’s outlined in white not black.  The latest pics of the now ‘gate guard’ (Edwards Museum display) N/AW shows the owl nose art is no longer present as the aircraft has been painted a different color.

Also, the white cross markings on the vertical tails were used for only a short time, towards the end of the program.  Robert DeMaio, in his rare self-published book A-10 Thunderbolt II: Details for the Modeler, says the original overall color of the N/AW was FS36118 Dark Grey.

Another major problem with all available N/AW kits is that they don’t provide you with the giant laser-FLIR pod or the giant modified Westinghouse WX radar pod. 

I’ve seen many modelers incorrectly add the LANTIRN pods to their YA-10Bs.

One other major problem with the Trumpet 1/32 scale kit is that the engineers who designed the two-seat fuselage failed to match-up the surface detailing with the parts originally designed for the single seater.   Specifically the single seater rear fuselage has raised rivets (correct) while the two-seat fuselage parts have recessed rivets (no such thing in real life, I call them divots).  Then there’s the problem that applies to both the N/AW and A-10; the surface detailing of the flying surfaces don’t match the fuselage, have fun rectifying that for a contest build.

Hobby Boss makes the 1/48 and 1/72 scale versions of the N/AW.  Their 1/48 scale kit comes with a bunch of weapons, and the surface detailing is uniform across fuselage and flying surfaces; recessed panel lines and divots (recessed rivets).

1:72 resin intake compared to kit intake.

The 1/72 scale Hobby Boss kit is basically one of their Easy Assembly kits as the simplified major parts literally snap-together.  But the engine intake openings are too small, which can be fixed by resin correction parts. It has recessed panel lines (no rivets no divots), yet there are no weapons.

YA-10B rocket sled, used for ejection seat tests at Holloman AFB, New Mexico. Now at Chino Museum in California.

In the rare book A-10 Thunderbolt II: Details for the Modeler, the author explained that the rocket sled used for ejection seat tests revealed that the side opening canopies interfered with the ejection process.  It was planned to fit a single clam-shell canopy on production models.

Proposed N/AW clam-shell canopy.

Despite the YA-10B (N/AW-10) being so short lived it has always been something model builders wanted to build.

In the late 1980s  and early 1990s conversion kits were made available by Falcon (1/72 scale) and Maintrack (1/48 scale for Monogram kits), but also failed to provide the unique laser-FLIR and WX radar pods. 

Monogram’s B-25 PANCHITO!

C-47 kit round-up

F-8C DFBW conversion

1/48 F-105G WILD WEASEL SHOWDOWN, HOBBYBOSS VS MONOGRAM

Vehicle I-D: C-47 Dakota/Skytrain, Douglas Commercial-3, R4D Goonies!

Entex got it right when their model box stated it was “The plane that changed the world.”  It’s my top pick for Zombie Plane, after seven decades it just won’t die, still flying today in both private and commercial use, and apparently some countries are still using it for military purposes.  It even commands the respect of wartime enemies, who adopted it for their own use.

Production began in 1936 and from then until now the C-47/DC-3/R4D has been used by at least 82 countries.

Fort Benning, Georgia, 16AUG2019:

Berlin Airlift 70th Anniversary, Clay Kaserne, Germany, 09-11JUN2019:

Videos:

May 2019, DC (Douglas Commercial)-3 over Catalina Island, California: 

“That’s all brother!”, Air Mobility Command Museum on Dover Air Force Base, Delaware, May 2019:

April , 2019 video report, history of 3rd Combat Cargo Squadron which flew the China-Burma-India Theater during WW2:

“That’s all brother!”, Sumpter Smith ANGB Alabama, April 2019:

November 2018, Homestead Air Reserve Base, Florida:

May 2016, AC-47 Spooky over New Mexico:

February 1964, M2-F1 lifting body tracking behind a Goonie, Edwards AFB, California: 

August 1963, NASA R4D-5/C-47H:

1956, NACA R4D, High-Speed Flight Station, Edwards AFB, California:

German Dakotas, 1957 to 1976:

Iran Air ‘DC-3s’ were actually C-47s with passenger interiors: 

Iranian CH-47 gives an Iranian C-47 a lift: 

Weirdos:

Video report,  North Dakota Air National Guard’s first disaster relief mission (Operation Haylift), during the winter of 1949:

Video report; C-47 Operation Market Garden:

Jungle Skippers’ “Cleo C”, Dyess Air Force Base, Texas:

Flak damage to a Jungle Skippers C-47, Corregidor Island, Philippines, World War Two (1943?):

2018 video explainer of the inception of the 349th Troop Carrier Group in 1943:

HARVEY: C-A-F DELIVERS AID WITH WORLD WAR 2 AIRCRAFT (Unfortunately this restored C-47 crashed and burned not even a year after taking part in Hurricane Harvey relief ops)

Popular Mechanics explains “Why the DC-3 Is Such a Badass Plane”

To make an Iran Air ‘DC-3’ use the C-47 fuselage with the DC-3 interior. Iranian airliners were converted C-47s and retained the cargo doors.

Believe it or not, ESCI and Italeri kits are not the same.

The Italeri kit is larger and its fuselage has an oval or egg shape to the cross section. The ESCI kit looks like a down-scaled version of the 1:48 Monogram kit, with recessed panel lines instead of raised surface details. The now out of production ESCI kit is the better kit.

Incomplete model kit supply list:

Decals;  facebook.com/pointerdog7/

Draw Decals

Kitsworld Decals

Hungarian Aero Decal 

JoyDecals

MicroScale Decals

Iliad Design

Xtradecal

VEHICLE I-D: ZOMBIE TANK T-55, THEY’RE EVERYWHERE!

VEHICLE I-D: NORMANDY PAINTED C-130 HERCULES

D-DAY F-15E STRIKE EAGLE

VEHICLE I-D: M4 SHERMAN (including my grandfather’s Sherman)

1:72 F-100 SUPER SABER KIT KLASH, OR MORE REASONS WHY YOU CAN’T TRUST SCALE DRAWINGS

Deutschland Über Alles!: Revell USA is dead, long live Revell Germany!

12MAY2018 /21:37 UTC-07 Tango 06  (23 Ordibehesht 1397/27 Sha’ban 1439/28 Ding-Si 4716)

“It is a sad time for the model building community… I have not seen anything ‘official’ from Revell, but It has been confirmed to me by a reliable source that Revell USA has in fact closed their doors.”-UP Scale Hobbies facebook post

Another victim of the so called recovered economy, the end of a long model building era in the United States, Revell USA (Revell-Monogram) is dead!

Starting out in California in 1943, as a subcontractor for plastics manufacturers, its first job reportedly being parts for washing machines, followed by anything relating to HO (1:87) scale train sets.   It was known as Precision Specialties.

When the company decided to focus on toys the name was changed to Revell (Wikipedia says it’s from the French word reveille, however Revell is a English/French family name that goes back to medieval times).  In the 1950s the focus was originally on model cars, but shifted to U.S. Navy ships, the most infamous being the constantly re-issued and horribly inaccurate USS Missouri.  This is humorous because supposedly the USN kits were considered so accurate that the Soviet Union bought Revell kits to learn about U.S. warship development (maybe that’s why the U.S.S.R. was constantly behind in the naval arms race).

Purportedly this crappy kit is what got the ball rollin' for Revell

Purportedly this crappy kit is what got the ball rollin’ for Revell

The success of Revell’s ship kits led to the company producing kits of almost anything you can think of.  However, this didn’t stop Revell from succumbing to the same economic forces as other industries, as I’ve previously explained in 1:72 SHOCK & AWE LOCKHEED F-104 STARFIGHTER, OR, WHY YOU CAN’T TRUST SCALE DRAWINGS! PLUS MASSIVE HISTORICAL CONFUSION ABOUT REVELL-MONOGRAM!

Monogram's classic 1974 issue Do 335, Monogram was Revell's biggest competitor at that time

Monogram’s classic 1974 issue Do 335, Monogram was Revell’s biggest U.S. competitor at that time

By 2012, longtime model kit builders thought economic bad times were over for Revell when an employee owned, Illinois based company, called Hobbico bought and merged Revell USA and Revell Germany (GmbH).  Wrong again!  In January 2018, Hobbico went bankrupt busted and began liquidating its divisions.  Immediately, Revell Germany issued a statement saying they were not impacted (“Hobbico’s bankruptcy filing was made in the United States and is strictly limited to the company’s U.S. operations, Revell-Germany is unaffected.”).

For decades (since 1970s) Revell Germany has reissued British Frog kits

For decades (since 1970s) Revell Germany has reissued British Frog kits

Revell USA production was halted in April, even shipments of already packaged kits were stopped. A group of investors called Quantum Capital Partners aus München (for some odd reason many U.S. and British sources are calling the group Blitz GmbH, my source is Revell Germany itself) which bought both Revell Germany and Revell USA.

The month before Revell was sold-off, Revell USA announced the much longed for reissue of the coveted Deal’s Wheels Baja Humbug

According to bankruptcy court documents, on 13APR2018 Quantum Capital Partners of Munich won the rights to Revell with a bid of about $3.9-million USD.  Revell USA ceased to exist, Revell Germany will continue as if nothing had happened.  I should point out that the $3.9-million was the high bid, apparently there was only one other bidder, it’s just more proof the model kit industry is in decline.  Hobbico was hoping for $10-million.

According to a press release by Revell Germany, Deutschland is the new home base for all Revell operations, including ops in North America: “Revell is pleased to partner with Quantum Capital Partners who supports the company in its further international growth.  At this point, I would also like to thank all trading and business partners for the Thank you for your confidence during the transition period in recent weeks.”-Stefan Krings, president of Revell Germany

“Revell is a renowned and well-established company and has been an impressive and internationally established successful toy brand. We will build on this strength and the brand with its unique positioning as a model maker….”-Steffen Görig, Quantum Capital Partners

Since its founding in 2008, Quantum Capital Partners (QCP) has taken over several dozens of companies including BASF, Bosch, Deutsche Bahn and even Airbus (even joining with the Islamic Investment Bank to make sure Airbus aircraft are Shariah compliant)!

Classic Hasegawa Voodoo, one of the first jet kits I built in the 1970s

Classic Hasegawa Voodoo, one of the first jet kits I built in the 1970s

By the way, Hobbico’s demise also affected Japan’s Hasegawa and Italy’s Italeri as Hobbico had become the distributor of those brands in the United States.

Italeri's old M47 (from late 1970s) is so good that recently Korea's Academy issued it

Italeri’s old M47 (first released around late 1970s early 80s) is so good that recently Korea’s Academy issued it

FALLING DOWN: U.S. MODEL KIT/RAILROAD HOBBY DEMISE, 2016-17

BLACKLIGHT REVELL DEAL’S WHEELS