Black 8 is now complete.
The Hasagawa kit was supplmented with:
- Quickboost exhaust stacks
- Barracuda wheels
- Aries cockpit
- HGW seatbelts
- Eagle cals decals
For the first time, I gave riveting with a riveting wheel a try. My efforts don't show up in most of the photos as I made the rivets too small and shallow to be seen at a distance.
Many of the parts in this kit are relatively thick plastic, including the tail wheel door. The kit molded it fixed in the open position. I removed the kit parts and modeled the doors closed.
I posted earlier on incorporating the landing gear bay walls from my Revell G-6 kit.
I used a brass rod for spring on the antenna cable.
I also added brakes lines on the lower section of the landing gear.
The loop antenna was fabricated out of a piece of an aluminum Dr. Pepper Zero can -- much more convincing than the kit part.
As usual I used Mr. Color lacquers but tried a different fading and shading technique.
Rather than post fading and shading without preshading, I tried preshading with an additional spatter pattern. It actually looks OK on the underside but is tough to see with the darker colors on the topside.
I also tried the salt fading technique for the first time on a luftwaffe subject. First with a light tan/gray mix, second with a dark gray/brown mix. I went light on the application and it looks good when looking closely, but it's not really noticable from normal viewing range.
I didn't do any of my usual post shading and fading on this one except for a black/brown mix along panel lines.
The spinner spiral was painted on.
I used sponges and colored pencils for the chips and scratches. Note that the K-4 wing fairings are made of wood.
Overall it was a fun project and I'm happy with the result. Like many others have learned with this kit that was released almost 20 years ago, it takes a lot of work to add AM parts and scratch build parts to get it to approach the level of detail that Eduard and Tamiya and others offer on more recent kits. It was worthwhile experimenting with new weathering techniques. I'd also like to give props to the superdetailers on the Large Scale Planes site for some tips and inspiration for this build.
Thanks for following along. Comments and critique are always welcome.