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Russian WWII planes - a fighter and light bomber/transport

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  • Member since
    July 2013
Posted by DURR on Wednesday, August 20, 2014 5:04 AM

i have a bunch of encore  yaks  i also did 2 yak-6        i am not saying the russian ac  were bad during wwii  they had some decent ac  but many  their ac were under rated      and they look good on the shelf next to  the everybody has  me109 ,p51 spitfires etc

  • Member since
    June 2004
  • From: 29° 58' N 95° 21' W
Posted by seasick on Wednesday, August 20, 2014 2:18 AM

Very Nice!

Chasing the ultimate build.

  • Member since
    August 2014
Russian WWII planes - a fighter and light bomber/transport
Posted by Ozmac on Wednesday, August 20, 2014 12:19 AM

Hi, just joined the forum yesterday, and I have a backlog of builds from my first 15 months in this great new hobby I've been enjoying so much. I don't do many military planes at all, but not so long ago I ended up building multiple examples of two different Russian WWII planes, the Yak 3 fighter and the Yak 6 light bomber/transporter.

The reason for building more than one is that all the model kits were given to me by a friend. He doesn't build models (but he does collect diecast). He came across a bunch of model plane kits a Russian trade group didn't want - they were literally going to throw them in the rubbish - so he grabbed as many as he could, and has given them to model builders he knows. Here's the first ones I built, the Yak 3s (three of them!).

The box he gave me contained 5 Yak 3 kits! They were incredibly crude, simple and rough, but it gave me the chance to have my first practice goes at using putty filler etc, so I learned a lot from trying to bring these horrible kits up to presentable condition. They're all in 1/48 scale, by the way.

I gave two of the Yak 3s to my friend and kept one for myself.

Now for the other plane, the little-known Yak 6. These two models are in 1/72 scale.

The Yak 6 is a relatively unknown thing. Even some of my plane-fanatic friends hadn't heard of it. It flew during 1943-44, did a lot of very good work supporting the partisans, and the Russians built 1000 of them. They were called a 'light bomber' and had a 500kg payload, but more often than not they were just a transporter. The co-pilot is the unlucky guy whose job it was to pop the hatch and operate the machine gun. Must have been a fun job on a cold day in Russia! 

As with the Yak 3s, I built two Yak 6s, so I have one and I've given one to my mate who gave me the freebie kit.

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