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F-14D Carrier Launch Diorama - COMPLETE 2/27/14

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41 replies
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  • Member since
    December 2006
  • From: Phoenix, AZ
Posted by Fly-n-hi on Friday, February 21, 2014 9:02 AM

Cool!  I really like the carrier deck!

  • Member since
    January 2011
  • From: Commonwealth of Virginia
Posted by Tal Afar Dave on Friday, February 21, 2014 5:50 AM

Hey Todd!

Great WIP post; really love the action captured on a busy flight deck.  Learning a lot from just looking at your pictures.  I've got a couple of Tomcats deep in my stash and will definitely be following along with your project to improve my builds.

Time to que up the "Danger Zone" and turn and burn!

2022 New Year's Resolution:  Enter 1 group build and COMPLETE a build this year!!  Why Photobucket did you rob me of my one Group Build Badge???  Must be part of the strong anti-Monogram cartel!!!

 ]

  • Member since
    February 2006
  • From: Smithers, BC, Canada
Posted by ruddratt on Sunday, February 2, 2014 1:46 AM

I'm not really a jet guy (WWI stuff floats my boat), but man oh man! This is incredible stuff that you've done here!  Plus, the way it was all explained, with such detail.  Many thanks for posting this! Yes

Mike

 "We have our own ammunition. It's filled with paint. When we fire it, it makes pretty pictures....scares the hell outta people."

 

  • Member since
    September 2013
Posted by DeafAviator on Saturday, February 1, 2014 8:12 PM
Thanks guys! Will try to get some more work done this week. Possibly even finish it (with the exception of the base trim/edges). The F/A-18 has all the big parts assembled (wings/cockpit/fuselage). It's been kind of on the back burner though and this F-14 has been the main show on my bench.

Ray - most of the work has been done over the last couple months. The carrier deck actually was pretty quick... About 3 weeks.

Todd Barker - Colorado Springs, CO

Current Projects:

  • 1/48 Beechcraft Bonanza - N51HM (Commission)
  • 1/48 B-25 Mitchell - Back Burner/Scheme TBD
  • Member since
    November 2003
  • From: Naples, FL
Posted by tempestjohnny on Saturday, February 1, 2014 11:29 AM

Awesome build. Must be great brothers.

 

  • Member since
    December 2003
  • From: Charleston, SC
Posted by sanderson_91 on Saturday, February 1, 2014 9:42 AM

Great looking work!  I love the F-14 and the carrier deck.  Can't wait to see the F/A-18!

 

 

  • Member since
    June 2013
Posted by RobGroot4 on Saturday, February 1, 2014 8:24 AM

Gorgeous!

Groot

"Firing flares while dumping fuel may ruin your day" SH-60B NATOPS

  • Member since
    November 2006
Posted by Bearcat57 on Saturday, February 1, 2014 12:39 AM
OUT-freakin'-STANDING!!!
  • Member since
    December 2013
  • From: Greenville, TX.
Posted by Raymond G on Friday, January 31, 2014 10:44 PM

Incredible!  I can't begin to imagine how long it took you to accomplish all this.  Thanks for taking the time to put this together for us!  Raymond

On the Bench:

U.S.S. Arizona (Revell)

P-51D Tribute (Revell)

57 Chevy Bel Air

 

 

 

 

  • Member since
    November 2003
  • From: State of Mississippi. State motto: Virtute et armis (By valor and arms)
Posted by mississippivol on Friday, January 31, 2014 10:25 PM

Wow, that's a lotta work; it looks great!

  • Member since
    March 2005
  • From: near Nashville, TN
Posted by TarnShip on Friday, January 31, 2014 1:13 PM

DA, this looks really great with all the parts in place.

That is going to one dio to be proud of.

Rex

almost gone

  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: Sonora Desert
Posted by stikpusher on Friday, January 31, 2014 12:34 PM

That is beautiful work DA! all it needs is some steam wisping across the deck ;-) I really love the depth you went into explaining your work. And it's the modified old Monogram alleycat ;-) I look forward to the finished dio!

 

F is for FIRE, That burns down the whole town!

U is for URANIUM... BOMBS!

N is for NO SURVIVORS...

       - Plankton

LSM

 

  • Member since
    September 2013
F-14D Carrier Launch Diorama - COMPLETE 2/27/14
Posted by DeafAviator on Friday, January 31, 2014 11:27 AM

Hey gents! Been procrastinating long enough on getting a WIP thread put up on this physically massive project.

Almost two years ago I decided I wanted to build a couple of navy jets for my brothers, both of whom served on the USS Carl Vinson in the 90's. Picked up a couple of Revell kits - the F-14D for my oldest brother, Jim and the F/A-18E for my other brother, Murray. I didn't say anything to either one, expecting to just build them and then surprise the brothers with the completed kits.

Some time later, after I had started the F-14 but shelved it temporarily, I got to talking to Murray about the models I build (particularly that Gee Bee I recently completed for my dad), and he mentioned how he would "kill to have an F-14", with the VF-124 colors. They were his training sponsors (I guess that's what it's called) for his stint in the navy, and he had fond memories of that cat leaning on an F-14 and the name Gunfighters... so I told him about my plans to build those models for them, and we agreed on switching them around: The F-14 for Murray and the F-18 for Jim.

After a few weeks of talking, we narrowed down colors, numbers, details, etc etc that he wanted on his plane. It was going to be somewhat fictional, and he asked me to just take liberty with my artistic license on it. Jim, however, still doesn't know about his kit - we are keeping him in the dark about his.

I picked up the SkunkModels Carrier Deck w/ Jet Blast Deflector after quite some time of hunting around for a decent price, and went over to HobbyTown and picked up the Hasegawa Deck Crew Set: A. As it happens though, I was able to get a steal on the Carrier Deck on eBay that actually had that same deck crew thrown in: both for only $45 including shipping! So I returned the deck crew I bought from Hobbytown and put that money towards all the primer & gray colors I'd need for this thing.

So what we have here is the Revell F-14D... just various pictures of it in the early stages of the build.



Initial Dry-Fitting



Nose work and scribing - nose cone had a horrible fit. Sanded that down and re-scribed.



Primered



Hacking off the flaps in order to drop them into takeoff position. This is my very first try at modifying wings like this. I ordered replacement wings from Revell so I could just worry about getting the slats/flaps off the wing and then get clean flaps & slats from the replacements. I also, stupidly, didn't bother to look at any references... just worked off of some google images and my own aviation experience. Note that this job is far from accurate or detailed - I just wanted to focus on doing a clean job that I had no previous experience with and make it look somewhat good. Lots and lots of superglue, filing, sanding, and shaping, I was able to come up with something acceptable for a first try at this.










I also did extensive modification to the nose gear - squatting it (which, of course, including chopping and re-positioning the linkages as well), dropping the catapult launch bar, and scratch-building the holdback bar. Everything was set up to fit the carrier deck catapult perfectly.

Original Nose Gear




A shot of the shortened nose gear next to a stock gear leg. 



And finally, the completed result. The holdback bar is just a bit of brass rod and tube - rod inside the tube and everything cut/ground to size.


Preshading:



And the finished result:





Cockpit test fitting:




After that, I cleared with some Future and got to work on decals.

I have to take a moment here and give Al Bell *major* kudos for getting these Gunfighter decals to me. Not only did he take the time to mail them out, but due to various reasons, they went back to him not once, but twice, and each time he immediately sent them back out. In the end, he turned down my payment and, in his words, "anything to see your brother smile"... men like that make this community the good place to be that it is. Thank you Al!

The decals were extremely fragile, and many of them broke... some in several little slivers. However, I was able to pull it off and it looks good!






Now - taking a break from the plane, lets move onto the base. Like previously said, it's the 1/48 SkunkModels Carrier Deck with JBD... and this thing is a real treat! It's pretty pricey but you do get what you pay for, and this really could hardly be improved on. The molding is very crisp, texturing is perfect, zero flash, and VERY few marks. I actually couldn't find ANY sink marks, punch marks, etc. I was dreading the complex JBD having marks all over the back of it but I didn't find a single one.... joy joy!



Assembly of the base itself is all butt-joins, so you will want to be generous with the liquid cement and take lots of time to do just one panel at a time in assembling this. LOTS of clamps are recommended! However, everything does fit VERY well out of the box and it really is superbly done. 





Completed assembly, with the JBD done as well. This is the same thing: all butt-joins. I suggest joining them all together then setting a couple books on top of it to make sure it's nice and flat.



From what I understand, the joints are actually real expansion joint lines, so with that considered, this is actually a very good result. I did have a couple of very minor steps but this was my own error in not doing enough checking before clamping. I filled all the joints with a bead of superglue followed by Mr. Surfacer and the end result is great.





JBD Assembly - This was a somewhat complex affair, and it's easier to do it a little differently from the instructions. I'll try to explain the best I can how I did it:

First, all the parts organized and set-up. 



Brackets for the rods that attach to the back of the JBD are installed. Use the rods by dry-fitting while the brackets are being glued in place to space them correctly. When gluing the rods, I first had the other half of the rods in place (you'll see what I mean below), then glued a couple of rods in place, adjusting against the placement of the other half of the JBD lifting system until the glue solidified, then placed the rest of the rods using that angle. 





The lower half of the lifting mechanism - this is all supposed to be done before the base is even assembled but there's no reason to do it that early. Makes more sense to wait until this point then assemble it all together. The first thing to do is install the hydraulics. Then after that, you can just snap the lower arms in place but do NOT glue them - you'll want them loose so they can be adjusted to each arm when installing the JBD later. This is what I was talking about with gluing the rods too... I rested the rods against these to get the angle right while the glue dried.




The catapult was assembled, as was the steam pit door. 



Preshading. In hindsight, this wasn't really necessary except for the JBD bay area. Post shading in combination with random spray patten and not completely covering the deck with the base color works better with this.


After painting. I also did the JBD as well according to photos of the Vinson.





Decaling. The decals went down wonderfully, and after a coat of Micro-Sol, they literally turned into paint. Good stuff... these were Cartografs and I believe this is my first time using their decals... really gorgeous stuff and I wish all decals were this good!






After dirtying up the whole deck with very thin black paint, I did what was to be the final flat coat and be done with all the major work on this carrier deck... then noticed something that wasn't right:




Every single decal had that "dirtiness" around it, and I realized that I was seeing Microsol residue. I decided to leave it alone but it continued to bother me, so I resprayed everything with Future and then re-coated with flat lacquer again and that solved the problem. 

So, here's where we are at now. Deck crew and pilots getting colors. 8 of the crew plus two pilots are going to this build - the rest are for Jim's F-18 build.






A mock-up of the final placement of all the little dudes. Pilots have been installed and the canopy is installed (in hindsight, I should've done this WAY earlier... oh well...). Tails are installed, decals are all done. Wings are just dry-fit but can be installed anytime now, really. Need to come up with a solution for propping them up though while the glue dries - they droop too much if left hanging. 


Mounting solution involves brass rod in the landing gear fitted into matched holes in the base. The holes are tight on the landing gear rods to make sure the nose gear fits over the catapult exactly right every time. Worked out beautifully! I highlighted the holes with a bit of gold paint sealed under a thick coating of clear to make them easier to see.


Finally, a few more shots of the deck crew placement mock-up...








At this point, what I have left is:

  • Landing gear doors need red trim. I completely forgot this... AFTER I installed everything! Bang Head
  • Various lights, touchups, and the like need to be painted on.
  • Canopy frame masked and painted.
  • Carrier deck edges framed or finished - haven't decided on how I will do this yet.
  • Deck crew permanently installed.
  • Final flat coat on deck crew and aircraft, with gloss coat touch-up afterwards. 
  • Final assembly of antennas, exhaust, etc. 

That's most, if not all that's left. Not too bad...

Well that's all for now guys... hope you enjoyed the entertainment! 


Todd Barker - Colorado Springs, CO

Current Projects:

  • 1/48 Beechcraft Bonanza - N51HM (Commission)
  • 1/48 B-25 Mitchell - Back Burner/Scheme TBD
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