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Double 1:72 OH-6A Loach WIP - FINISHED AT LAST! - Page 3

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93 replies
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  • Member since
    June 2014
  • From: New Braunfels , Texas
Posted by Tanker - Builder on Friday, December 23, 2016 3:58 PM

Hey ! Pawel !

 What do you call a Loach with Gun Pods -" A hard boiled egg ! ! lol.?

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Fort Knox
Posted by Rob Gronovius on Friday, December 23, 2016 12:04 PM

the pilot of that helicopter, Miss Clawd, still posts once in a while on modeling forums.

  • Member since
    June 2016
Posted by Headhunter88 on Wednesday, December 21, 2016 3:58 PM

Me too Smile

  • Member since
    April 2016
  • From: N. Burbs of ChiKawgo
Posted by GlennH on Saturday, December 10, 2016 5:34 PM

Great. I am gonna follow with interest.

A number Army Viet Nam scans from hundreds yet to be done:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/southwestdreams/albums/72157621855914355

Have had the great fortune to be on every side of the howitzers.

  • Member since
    May 2009
  • From: Poland
Double 1:72 OH-6A Loach WIP - FINISHED AT LAST! - Page 3
Posted by Pawel on Saturday, December 10, 2016 4:17 PM

Hello!

Long time ago I have built the Italeri 1:72 OH-6A. It was the model that started my interest in the Vietnam War. Back then I have built it quick and easy and made a few mistakes, many of them already built-in in the kit itself. I've been thinking about improving on that, and so here we go - another try. And one more :-) You see I had two kits in my stash - the Italeri kit and another, from a company called AZ Model. It's actually a modified copy of the Italeri offering. In all the photos below if you see olive drab plastic it's from the Italeri kit, gray plastic is the AZ Model parts and white plastic is my scratchbuilding.

We're talking about those two kits:

Italeri 1:72 OH-6A

AZ Model 1:72 OH-6A over Vietnam

OK, so here's what we get in the boxes:

1:72 Italer/AZ Model OH-6A Loach/Cayuse by Pawel

As you can see the AZ Model fuselage has all the doors on - they have to go for a Vietnam chopper. The Italeri also has the doors on the right fuselage half - the one that least needs it. The left Italeri fuselage half has nasty notches in places where the door hinges would be - and those notches shouldn't be there. But the biggest problem with BOTH of the kits is that they actually show later civilian Hughes 500 fuselages instead of the Hughes 369 / OH-6A that flew in Vietnam. The most noticeable difference is seen in the rear window and the shape of the rear door. On the OH-6A the rear door was significanly lower than the front door which allowed for a big rear window. On the Hughes 500 the rear door had a height equal to the front door, and so the rear window was smaller - and this is how it looks like in both kits. The AZ Model also has a drip rail above the door - many newer Variants of the Hughes 500 have that, but the OH-6As didn't.

I'm trying to model one "Egg" with the "music box" - minigun in the rear and the rear windows patched over with sheet metal. The other "Egg" will have the rear windows and no "music box".

I started cutting out the unnecessary doors from the fuselage halves. It was the time to think about the corrections for the problem mentioned above:

1:72 Italer/AZ Model OH-6A Loach/Cayuse by Pawel

In the above photo you see the holes I drilled to remove the extra styrene. I also started to enlarge the rear bulkhead, that is way too small for the fuselage. In the chopper with no rear windows I blanked them off with sheet styrene. In the other one I cut out a portion of the fuselage around the windows and replaced it with pieces of bent clear plate. That should give me nice, smooth seamless windows. I also lowered the upper edge of the rear doors:

1:72 Italer/AZ Model OH-6A Loach/Cayuse by Pawel

I also started detailing the rear compartment. Both of the kits give you a civilian main transmission cover - and in Vietnam the airmen flying the chopper tried to get rid of extra weight - so they removed most if not all of the interior lining, and so the main transmission was exposed - I tried to show that. But first I had o enlarge the bulkhead to make it fit the fuselage and put the floor at the right level, flush with the door threshold:

1:72 Italer/AZ Model OH-6A Loach/Cayuse by Pawel

In the photo below you can see my reworked main bulkhead with the unnecessary void spaces filled, notches that should be there cut and the slot for the external electrical connection added. The rear bulkhead has the engine shaft cover and the main transmission added:

1:72 Italer/AZ Model OH-6A Loach/Cayuse by Pawel

Now I had to do it one more time, this time for the Italeri model. I also added one more detail to the bulkheads - looks like some kind of heating duct. The "trannies" are not fixed yet - to make painting easier. The interior is gray and the "trannies" should be black:

1:72 Italer/AZ Model OH-6A Loach/Cayuse by Pawel

And that would be all for now - now I'm working on the front of the interior. Thanks for looking and have a nice day

Paweł

All comments and critique welcomed. Thanks for your honest opinions!

www.vietnam.net.pl

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