So I decided to start the Yak-3 tonight, and man am I glad I did!
This Eduard kit leans heavily on the simple side, but the detail is solid and the fit - so far - is Tamiya good.
Here's a quick tour:
Told ya it'd be quick!
Since I'm planning to paint both cockpits the same grey, I mostly gave the La-5 the night off so I could prep and prime the Yak-3.
Priming didn't take very long, though, so I went ahead and assembled the wings of both planes. Each is a bit unique in its own way.
With the Yak, the wings come in two parts - top and bottom. That's it. The cockpit floor is molded into the upper wing, and the fuselage just snuggles down right on top. The fit here is excellent.
With the La-5, the wing comes in six parts - a single lower surface, and each upper wing surface divided into two. The rationale for this? Beats the hell out of me. Both surfaces have lips at the back that lock over the trailing edge of the lower wing. I read a review of the Zvezda kit that recommended gluing the upper surfaces together first since otherwise they have a tendency to develop steps. I didn't want to use even the Touch-n-Flow on so tight a seam, so instead I located the surfaces on each wing, taped the hell out of the join line from the top, then took them off the lower wing and applied Tenax to the join from the inside. After that, it was dry fit, tape to hold, then Touch-n-Flow. And viola, the wings are done!
So far, I'm really digging both kits. The Zvezda is certainly involved, but well made, and the Eduard Yak is a totally pleasant surprise in terms of detail and fit.
Tomorrow - cockpits!
On the Bench: 1/32 Trumpeter P-47 | 1/32 Hasegawa Bf 109G | 1/144 Eduard MiG-21MF x2
On Deck: 1/350 HMS Dreadnought
Blog/Completed Builds: doogsmodels.com