I FINALLY have some pics to share! Man, I love Tamiya's Jug kits, but there's definitely a ramp-up time before things start going together.
First up, engines. One of the reasons I wanted to build the Revellogram and Tamiya kits side-by-side was to explore the points that come up in the endless debates around here. One of the biggest being Tamiya kits costing more/not being worth it. In my opinion the Razorback earns the $30ish it usually goes for, and totally earns the $20 I paid for this particular kit. And a big part of that is the extent of detail. The Tamiya R-2800 isn't a Quickboost or Vector piece, but it's detailed enough considering how packed into the cowl it will be.
The Revellogram example, on the other hand...eesh. Monogram did some pretty bang-up engines back in the day. This is not one of them. Detail is shallow, cramped, not enough room to add detail. If I wanted to go crazy, I guess I could go with a Vector R-2800, scratch the intake framing, and pray. But I don't want to go crazy on this build.
Next - the Tamiya cockpit. Still working on the Revellogram, but it makes me sad (the other major drawback aside from the engine). Painted this one up in MM Euro Dark Green to stand in for DDG. Drybrushed with MM Dunkelgrau and touches of Floquil Old Silver here and there. The instructions called for the control stick boot to be painted Buff, so I used a Vallejo equivalent, though none of my references show a P-47 with a stick boot. Seat is Ultracast, PE bits out of Eduard's excellent P-47 placards set.
I still have some details to pick out, need to add the lever handle to the throttle quadrant, and need to dirty things up with a thin oil wash. But getting close...
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