A 1/48th B 29, Rich? Er, no, I take your point. I'm not sure I'd take that on!
I didn't expect to see all foil, of course and, to be scrupulously fair, I haven't read every post, but in my selection, purely randomly clicked upon, I did expect one or two.
I would recoil from any suggestion of using Alclad far more readily than the tedious, but not difficult matter of foiling, as i understand it is a multi-stage process. My chum in the model car game has used it and raves about it. Still looks like paint to me! Perhaps it's suitable for those NMF a/c that have a bit of oxidation on them, a mattish look, but you could never do a polished lightning or, say, "Precious Metal", the Reno racer, in paint of any kind.
I've done a 1/32nd scale Kieft racing car in foil, panel by panel in the style of a full sized coachbuilder, where only small parts can be made and have to be welded together, with only the weld linished, so I just used an old typewriter rubber to put the linish marks on the model, which disguised the joints in the foil. I didn't burnish it because I wanted the "mill finish" that any hand made car body will exhibit without paint.
On the Spitfire, the clinker (clencher?) pattern of spanwise wing panelling is also so easy to do with a simple overlap of foil.
When I say foil, I don't mean Bare Metal Foil, by name. That's too thin. I use that for chrome on slot cars. But on model aircraft, I use Sellotape aluminium, a product available in any hardware shop for sealing gutters and down pipes. So cheap compared with model foils. Thicker too, so will take rivet impressions with care.
It also burnishes and even polishes, should you wish to do "Precious Metal". I also know that Lightnings were polished as a colleague tells me that was a punishment in the RAF at RAF Binbrook for any small time miscreants. "Get out there and polish that kite, Aircraftsman Bloggs!" An excuse to sit stripped to the waste all day in the sunshine atop that distinctive wing.
I doubt if I'll have time to take part in the GB with the Spitfire, but will put the results up when I have done it.
I am doing a small range of vac-form kits starting with the Fairey FD2 and Heaven help anyone who paints that beauty <G>.
Cheers,
Martin
EDIT Kermit, I missed your post while typing, but...QED!!