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Tamiya 1/32 P-51D Mustang - 'Red Tail Raider'

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5 replies
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DWW
  • Member since
    December 2011
Posted by DWW on Sunday, March 20, 2016 12:19 PM

Hi folks:

 

Thanks for the nod on this one - much appreciated!

 

Best regards

 

Steve Big Smile

 

  • Member since
    January 2013
Posted by seastallion53 on Saturday, March 19, 2016 10:11 PM

Nice job,the Tuskegee airmen would be proud.

  • Member since
    March 2015
  • From: Streetsboro, Ohio
Posted by Toshi on Saturday, March 19, 2016 8:53 PM

Excellent finish, just superb!

Toshi

On The Bench: Revell 1/48 B-25 Mitchell

 

Married to the most caring, loving, understanding, and beautiful wife in the world.  Mrs. Toshi

 

 

  • Member since
    January 2016
  • From: A Galaxy Far, Far Away
Posted by Hunter on Saturday, March 19, 2016 7:35 PM

Steve - 

Wonderful job sir! The wash on the interior of the fusilage is perfect. Sure wish I could have seen you build this great kit. Thank you for sharing. Again, great job!

Hunter 

      

  • Member since
    June 2014
Posted by BrandonK on Saturday, March 19, 2016 6:38 PM

WOW, beautiful !! Very nice Red Tail.

BK

On the bench:

A lot !! And I mean A LOT!!

2024 Kits on deck / in process / completed   

                         14 / 5 / 2  

                              Tongue Tied

DWW
  • Member since
    December 2011
Tamiya 1/32 P-51D Mustang - 'Red Tail Raider'
Posted by DWW on Saturday, March 19, 2016 2:35 PM

Hi folks: 

A small tribute build to Captain Roscoe Brown via the excellent Tamiya kit. I've been in contact with Roscoe, who responded very kindly and it's a pleasure to finish 'Bunnie' / 'Miss Kentucky State', as it's been on my modelling bucket list for a long time.

 

 

 

The kit sidewalls finished off with BarracudaCals cockpit decals.

 

 

 

As a side note, the P-51D on display at Hendon RAF Museum is, it seems, broadly accepted as a fine quality restoration of the marque and in its natural metal finish guise, also has wings coated in aluminium lacquer, akin to that used in wartime. 

My enquiries into the factory process involved (after puttying the panel joints) one or two sprayed applications of DuPont Light Grey primer. This was then overcoated with an aluminium lacquer in the ratio of eight ounces of aluminium paste to a gallon of clear lacquer or varnish. It seems the aluminium in this mix reacted vigorously with oxygen and became aluminium oxide, a greyish material which accounts (in tandem with the grey primer beneath) for the Mustang wings at Hendon being overtly grey in tone, rather than the solid silver or aluminium normally used to portray this feature on models. Depending on whether the lacquer was new or aged, therefore gives modellers scope for a more silvery grey, evolving to the darker grey of the Hendon Mustang. The build seen here can be considered somewhere between the two.  

Given the grey bias of the Hendon Mustang, a concoction of Tamiya XF-19 Sky Grey (one part), Tamiya X-32 Titanium Silver (three parts), Tamiya XF-2 Flat White (one part) and Tamiya X-22 Clear (two parts) were mixed and sprayed over the appropriate parts of the wing. This gave a tone commensurate with the Hendon paint, while leaving a gentle satin finish, that was later glossed with more X-22 to more closely match the museum Mustang. 

I had some dialogue with Dana Bell over this before settling on the m/o above, who kindly advised the following - "Most of the Mustang's aluminum skin was Alclad - an aluminum alloy coated with a thin layer of pure aluminum. The aluminum coating would fix any corrosion to the surface, preventing the oxygen from migrating into the alloy core. The wings, however, were puttied to reduce friction drag, and looked like heck unless given a finish coat. On camouflaged Mustangs, there was no problem. But on uncamouflaged Mustangs, the wings needed to be painted silver for appearances' sake. I'm attaching a shot of one of the Tuskegee P-51Bs to show how well your model matches reality." 

 

 

 

The main gear doors awaiting finishing.

 

 

 

 

The build is more particularly set out in the Airfix Model World 'USAAF Special', published Thursday 17 March, along with a range of other builds, history pieces by Dana and other great content. 


Happy days. happy.gif


Steve happy.gif

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