Well, TB, for me it was easy.
I simply didn't have any choice, I could work in those tiny little places for weeks, or I could build models of the whole aircraft.
I was doing okay right up until the interior sets for the 1/350 aircraft came out, around the same time as people started doing the inner bridge details on 1/700 ships. (yes, those are not typos)
at that point, Anne and I had a talk,,,,,,,,and the result is that the cockpits on my 1/72 scale aircraft now get a nice cast resin ejection seat, and either a Zoom cockpit set or one of those very basic cardboard and clear plastic Instrument panels, and that is all, and even then you have to get nose oil on the canopy to see very much.
I pulled back in other places too,,,,,,,,no more "authentically shaped" wire clips for RBF flags, bomb arming wires, bomb decal stenciling that can't be read. I have decided to "scale effect" those types of details, also, lol, If it takes an extreme close-up photo to be able to see it to model it, then it wouldn't show as you walk up to the aircraft in real life until you got "nose oil close" to it.
A few products or techniques showed up at around the same time,,,,,,and I just said "enough",,,,If I could find it, I would post the link to a 500 pound Snakeye,,,,,,,with fins that open and close,,,,,,,in 1/48 scale !! I build a lot of Phantoms, and that means that most of the time, I would need to build 12 of those bombs for each Phantom on the shelf,,,,,,,,and that just wouldn't be happening at the Hangar Deck.
I am just fine with getting the paint right, the tail codes and carrier assignment accurate, the weapons load having the right parts, the nose bumps right, and building without a thumbprint on the fuselage,,,,,correctly smelling hydraulic oil leaks I will leave up to a better modeler than myself.
more than you asked about, I am sure
Rex
Rex