I didn't want a dead flat finish. So that caused a little adventure. I mixed Vallejo satin and matte varnish and airbrushed it on the top. (I left the bottom alone – the Flory wash finish was just right.) The effect was fine, but the finish a little grainy. I tried sanding it with very fine sponges, but that didn't really do the trick. Fortunately after applying a coat of Tamiya rattle can satin finish, everything looked fine, but a tad too bright. So I gave it a very light coat of Testors matte rattle can, and got it between matte and satin. That was fine.
Anyway, I can't really make any excuses here. It was a little tough to photograph (I enhanced a couple) but you can get a pretty good idea of what it looks like – especially on the details. But the kit pretty much reflected what I wanted, so anything wrong (minus the usual bits of driver error) comes from my imagination and not my materials or execution.
I should say something about the RAF in late war. The UK did an utterly spectacular job producing a whole lot of aircraft – including heavy bombers – with an economy that wasn't ideally geared for it. (Not to mention naval, infantry and vehicle building.) The malaise that gripped Brit designers after WWI was shattered by Mitchell and Camm in the mid-30s. (The Bolton Defiant? Really?) And the aircraft coming from the UK were a splendid lot – Hurricane, Beaufighter, Mosquito, Lancaster and of course the Spitfire. Minus the 262, the best of the British aircraft matched the best of the LW (the late war high altitude Spitfires matched up very well with Doras they might encounter – which was rare. They surpassed any 109.) Their best planes could accommodate numerous updates and stay at or near the top. And let's not forget that the P-51 was RAF-US private company project done with little help from the USAAF.
And it usually showed in the sky. The “Few” created a real life epic. Rommel learned to hate the thought of the Desert AF. No German unit that engaged the Spit IX enjoyed it. Whatever you think of Harris, the Lancasters dropped an amazing load of bombs. There were bad moments. Churchill's odd attempt to keep air presence over the French channel coast in 41-42 led to ugly encounters between Spit Vs and early 190s. (Those flights and early Bomber Command raids kept most FWs out of the Russian Front for nearly a year.) But between 1940 and mid-44 it became painfully obvious that the RAF was not spared a design defect that afflicted every European air force, and harmed the USAAF until 8th AF decided bombers couldn't defend themselves. (Utterly astounding that many fighters weren't fitted for drop tanks until well into the war.) The role of long range escort had simply been missed. In practice this meant that the RAF, with its wonderful planes and pilots, largely missed out on history's greatest air battle – the struggle for Germany's skies that raged from January 44 until September or so 1944. That was the moment for the great 8th AF P-51 groups that cut the LW to shreds. Had late model Spits been able to get to that battle the LW would have died sooner. (And it died. Germany had a lot of planes until 1945, but the pilots were rookies ready for the slaughter – literally. There were the great aces but we killed most of them too.)
The RAF had a splendid renaissance over Europe after D-Day. There were fighter strips in Normandy even before Cobra – after July every LW strip the allies captured had new owners. Many were flying Typhoons, Tempests and late model Spits. The farther the advance the more RAF fighters could take part in festivities over Germany. But most of the RAF single engine birds were part of the 2nd Tactical AF which meant every plane with a roundel was shooting up German ground targets. (All US fighters got into that act, including P-51s which may not have been bright.) The result was that while making the European landscape for anything that moved in German colors, RAF fighter squadrons were beginning to build their kill totals again – at least until the LW more or less quit flying in the West in early 45. A specialty for allied planes was to fly standing patrols over any airbase large enough to accommodate LW jets. The 262 caused near panic for a few weeks, but it didn't take long before jets in the air grew scarce. BTW: as the war came closer to ground the clipped wing became common. It was originally put on the SpitV to aid its roll rate – an important factor at altitudes under about 18,000 feet under FW guns. It also allowed in later Spit IXs an increased fuel load. Some of the late model Spits had outstanding high altitude performance, but the war for most planes went down in altitude after Normandy. (Ground support why the Red AF always favored low altitude performers like the LA5 even though their “King” Cobras and Migs had good high alt performance.)
The RAF certainly earned its supper – and the gratitude of the free world – during WWII, and it ended on a decided “up note.” Spitfire XIVs were a part of it.
Pics below.
Eric
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