Hi guys, I made some progress today, in between cleaning and tidying the place, putting washing through and such... Airfix first. I closed the fuselage yesterday and did some seam work, and today I basically ran through the rest of construction. I painted inside the three radiator units and mounted them, fitted the wing to the fuselage and added the engine cowling and tail surfaces. One of the tail braces is in place, the other snapped in the process, so I'll need to work out a scratch built replacement.
The cockpit turned out quite well for the scale:
And the project overall:
I can work on seams and that snapped part, but it'll be a week and a half before the order for masks is even actioned by my LHS, so it could be a month before I come back to this one for the paintwork.
The Hobbycraft kit has certainly lived up to the company's almost comical reputation, with cockpit parts that fit where they touch and could reduce a seasoned modeller to tears of frustration with the illogic of the assembly sequence. Heck, even the plans were drawn by hand and a measure of how couldn't-care-less the process was can be judged by the fact the "artist" drew SEVEN exhaust stubs where there are six on the parts, though that is the only accurate thing about them. Here's the cockpit:
It doesn't look too bad, but the fit into the fuselage is less engineering and design than a matter of hope and luck. Since this afternoon I have been using file and knife to thin both the walls of the cockpit and the fuselage itself, and am close to getting them to nest together. I don't know why I'm surprised, this is Hobbycraft we're dealing with, and no sooner do you open one of these than suddenly you're drilling out, grinding back and chocking up. It's the only D in town. Well, Hobby Boss is rumoured to be entering the 109 game this year, albeit with a pair of already well-served G airframes, and you never know, maybe they'll tool the early marks, and create definitive models in the process.
I have the D wing finished and sanded, so it's a matter of bringing this thing together, however it wants to go, then making sure there's a decent paintjob to catch the eye.
I'm looking forward to my Hasegawa G-2, it'll be a relief to build one I know will more or less fall together!
Cheers, M/TB379