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Three Aircraft Builds By Kyle Lord For Tim Connelly

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  • Member since
    December 2005
Posted by PTConsultingNHR on Tuesday, December 26, 2017 2:37 PM
Hi. I hadn't noticed that, but - you're right.
  • Member since
    November 2003
  • From: Naples, FL
Posted by tempestjohnny on Monday, December 25, 2017 1:33 PM
Great looking builds Tim. That picture that has the Six sitting on its tail behind the T-33 really shows the size difference

 

  • Member since
    December 2005
Posted by PTConsultingNHR on Monday, December 25, 2017 11:37 AM
Hi Guys,
 
Kyle has sent me some in-progress shots of all three projects, and here they are:
 
The F-106A:
 
 F106BUILD22 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F106BUILD21 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F106BUILD20 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F106BUILD19 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F106BUILD18 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F106BUILD17 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F106BUILD16 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F106BUILD15 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
The gear is painted silver, but, if memory serves, on the real Dart, they were white, he says he’ll correct that.
 
Here are some of the many shots of the T-33 build.  He says it’s all-but done, just the canopy needs to be glued down.
 T33BUILD66 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 T33BUILD65 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 T33BUILD64 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 T33BUILD63 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 T33BUILD61 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
And, lastly – the “surprise” F4-U-1D build; it’s being finished as Boyington’s #86 “Lulubelle” (I’ve heard it was actually “Lucybelle, I don’t know).  After Kyle told me that he was going to this build for me as a surprise; I tried to track down the decal sheet which has Boyington’s #883”, but could only find it in 1:32.  I wanted that one because he actually flew 883 … #86 was only used in that set of publicity shots.
Here are some of the many in-progress shots he has sent me.
 
 F4UBUILD55 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F4UBUILD54 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F4UBUILD53 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F4UBUILD52 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F4UBUILD51 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F4UBUILD49 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F4UBUILD48 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F4UBUILD47 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F4UBUILD46 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F4UBUILD43 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 
 

 

Tim
  • Member since
    December 2005
Posted by PTConsultingNHR on Saturday, December 9, 2017 1:38 PM
Thanks, ... Kyle's work just blows me away. That 33 is impressive. I too can't wait to see the Dart.
  • Member since
    September 2012
Posted by GMorrison on Saturday, December 9, 2017 1:16 PM

I saw the T-33 for sale in a thrift store the other day, but stash guilt prevented me from buying it. Man, thats a fifty year old kit!

Those are nice projects, Tim. I look forward to his build of the Dart in particular.

 Modeling is an excuse to buy books.

 

  • Member since
    December 2005
Three Aircraft Builds By Kyle Lord For Tim Connelly
Posted by PTConsultingNHR on Saturday, December 9, 2017 1:01 PM
Hi Guys,
 
I have asked Kyle Lord to build me two kits.  Both are 1:72. One is a F-106A Delta Dart and the other is a T-33 Shooting Star.  Originally, I gave him the Hasegawa 1:72 F-106 kit and the Hasegawa 1:72 T-33 kit.  He started both kits straight away.  However, he found the Hasegawa F-106 kit lacking in detail, so he stopped work on it and ordered a Trumpeter 1:72 F-106 kit.  I must say, that after seeing photos of the sprues, the Trumpeter kit definitely has more detail, especially in the area of the cockpit.
Both, the F-106 and the T-33 models will be finished in the markings of the 101st FIS of the 102nd FIW of the Massachusetts Air National Guard.  The F-106 will wear the markings of “Alpha-Kilo one-one”, my good friend, (now retired LT. COL.) Art Bugbee often flew “one-one” (although “Alpha-Kilo one-four” was his personal mount while the 101st flew the Dart and had his name on it. But, there is no sheet out with markings for “one-four”, but there is a sheet with the markings for “one-one” and that’s the one I bought and mailed to Kyle this past week.
I was going to ask Mark of STARFIGHTER DECALS if he’d take the sheet he created in 1:48 for me of the markings of “one-four” (complete with Maj. A. J. Bugbee on it) and resize it to 1:72. A couple of years ago, I had Stan Pienkowski rebuild the old Revell/Monogram 1:48 F-106A that I built myself in 1984, and mark it up as Art’s “one-four” and gave it to Art.  He loves it.  He even has the windscreen from the real “one-four” sitting in his barn in New Hampshire.  One day, in 1981 (when I was 21 and a first semester Junior at CCSU), Art got me some simulator time in the F-106 simulator they had on base.  I thought that was so cool.  Why?  Because I’ve got Cerebral Palsy, and am confined in a motorized wheelchair.  That meant/means I can’t/couldn’t serve in the military and fly fighters, or any plane for that matter.  I shot down a TU-95 and a MiG-25.  He also had me sit in on a mission briefing once too. 
I sent Mark an email about it, but he did not and still hasn’t replied.  That’s OK, inasmuch I found the sheet I’ve just mailed off to Kyle. 
The T-33, well, that old bird holds a special meaning to me as well.  There’s a photo of me from 1981 (that I can’t bloody well find – but I know still exists), the same day that I got my two “kills”, behind my parents’ 1979 Plymouth Voyager (the full-sized van, not the mini-van), wearing Art’s flight helmet, holding his flight jacket that he had just given me (and I still have and wear), the jacket had/has over 1,000 flight hours (all in the 106).  In the photo, behind me, is the T-33 being prepped for a cross-country hop.  Art has told me that he, and another 101st pilot, were trying to figure out a way to get me into the back-seat of the T-33, because the back-seat of the B-model of the 106 was too high off the ground to safely get me into. 
Sadly, those plans never came to fruition – that would’ve been so cool!  I can picture it; he and I flying from Cape Cod, back to Connecticut – to do a fly-over of my college girlfriend’s house in Ansonia.  Oh, well. What’s that old saying?  “The best-laid plans of mice and men …”
A few weeks ago, Kyle emailed me to tell me that he was going to build me a pro-bono kit.  That is the Tamiya 1:72 F-4U-1D.  I accepted his kind offer and said that I’d like it as the ‘883’ which Pappy Boyington (a childhood hero) is said to have flown.  But, I haven’t been able to find 1:72 decals for it … I can find ‘em in 1:32 easy enough though ………………..
Here are some photos of the progress on all three kits by Kyle:
 
The new F-106:
 F106BUILD by Tim Connelly, on Flickr 

 F106BUILD4 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F106BUILD10 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F106BUILD11 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F106BUILD14 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F106BUILD17 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
The T-33 Shooting Star:
 T33BUILD3 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 T33BUILD45 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 T33BUILD49 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 T33BUILD50 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 T33BUILD51 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 T33BUILD53 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 T33BUILD54 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
Kyle’s surprise F-4U:
 
 F4UBUILD6 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F4UBUILD7 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F4UBUILD9 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F4UBUILD10 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F4UBUILD16 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F4UBUILD18 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F4UBUILD19 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 
 F4UBUILD21 by Tim Connelly, on Flickr
 

Tim

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