Gentlemen:
Forgive my blasphemy here, but I find the current B-1B Lancer schemes- plain gray- boring. The initial release of the Revell/Monogram B-1B Lancer bomber kit was in a "desert camo scheme," circa 1983 or so. I've always liked this scheme, especially in contrast to the previous plain white ones, and boring grays they wear today.
This initial release of the 1/48 kit is usually angrily dismissed outright-; as reviews note rather huffily, "No B-1B ever wore the colorful desert scheme- only a few of the B-1As."
But there's hope....in the Detail and Scale book on the B-1 Lancer, the author comments on the Monogram 1/72 B-1 "B"" kit something to the effect of, "It's more like a B-1A, has features of a B-1A, so you could convert this kit to a true B-1A without too much work." But he doesn't elaborate...
Just picked up the 1983 release of the Monogram 1/72 "B-1B," with the totally ficticious red, white and blue swooshes on the wings- a sci-fi scheme! So if I finished it in the desert camo schme, it would be a step up- at least a few Lancers actually wore this scheme, unlike the Monogram imaginary paint job!
Do any of you have opinions/ ideas on how one would make a genuine, desert-camoed B-1A Lancer (not "B") in either 1/48 or 1/72 scale? What sort of surgery would be needed to the Revell/ Monogram 1/72 and/or 1/48 kits to bring them back to B-1A configuration?
I do have the old Minicraft 1/144 B-1A in the desert scheme. Cool little kit but too small, so I can use it (the kit decals, paint scheme drawing, etc.) as a rough guide to what a 1/72 or 1/48 B-1A circa 1984, in desert camo, might look like.
Many thanks!
Best,
Christian