I should not be starting yet another project, but this one just snuck up on me on New Year's Eve. This is Revell's huge 1/32 He-219, which has recieved much withering fire on the Internet over a number of issues. Okay, yeah, I see all of the snags, but it still looks like a Uhu at the end of the day, so here goes.
The parts do show some flash, and all parts require some clean up with a knife and sandpaper. The fuselage and wings feel a little floppy due to their thickness. There are a bunch of weird contour irregularites, due to the CAD engineerng I believe, which I will touch upon as the affected parts come up during assembly.
Here are the major airfame parts rubber banded together. It is a big beast!
First order of business is to identiify the annoying ejector pin marks that will need to be eliminated. Fortunately, there are not too many on this kit. The two in the cockpit may not be critical, as I have found out that the instrument panel covers them - drats, wasted some Mr. Surfacer 500. Note that a section of sprue has been left on the windscreen frame, to provide some protection during initial construction.
The other four are in the main wheel bays, which also have nacelle seam lines that will be a doozy to fill without losing detail. A pain in the you-know-where, but doable.
I slapped the stabilizers and fins together to see how they fit. The heater intake on the starboard stabilizer is kind of gappy, but Mr. Surfacer takes care of that.
The trailing edges of the stabilizers where they meet the fuselage have a contour mismatch. I am not sure if the real plane had this, but I doubt it. I''ll look at the 1/48 Tamiya kit to see what went wrong here.
BTW, all the control surfaces are moveable, although I have no idea why. My rudders and elevators are all nice and floppy, but smarter people could simply cut off the mounting pins and glue the control surfaces in afterwards. I just did it to see if it could be done.
For now, my only planned mods are as follows:
- Add aftermarket seat belts.
- Add brake lines to landing gear.
- Recontour propeller blade faces (unless someone comes up with a resin set for under $20.).
As always, advice and input are welcomed!