lostagain
Good stuff Harold, on the roster and looking forward to it! 1/48 will be a big model.
Yes the Catalinas were very important for the long range defence and surveillance for Australia, and moving teams behind enemy lines.
Thank you Piers. For the record here is where I am on both models today.
Eduard 1/48 Supermarine Spitfire Mk.IIa:
I completed major surgery on the fuselage by cutting the engine compartment off at certain panel lines. I also completed some of the upgrade cockpit painting and assembly. All the Brassin (upgrade) parts are resin and photo-etched metal compared to the original kit parts which are injection molded styrene. The quality of Eduard manufacturing is the best I've ever worked on in 1/48 scale.
Eduard Brassin Rolls Royce Merlin Engine:
Eduard Brassin cockpit:
Eduard Brassin brass landing gear:
Monogram 1/48 Consolidated PBY-5 Catalina:
Both the Spitfire and the PBY have special importance to me since my family was involved in their operation and maintenance during the Second World War. My Uncle Harold was a Royal Canadian Air Force pilot who flew Spitfires in Britain and North Africa and Lancaster bombers for the RAF over Germany. My Father and my aunt worked on PBY aircraft in the U.S. Navy. My Aunt Rose was a First-class Aviation Machinist Mate at Norfolk Naval Air Station in Virginia. My father was called back into service after December 7, 1941, to work on Consolidated B-24 Liberators in Burma, India as a Staff Sergeant in the U.S. Army Air Force.
The Consolidated PBY was nick named Catalina by the British and Australian crews who flew them, and the name stuck. From what I learned the Catalina was used by all the allied forces including Russia. It had particular importance in the RAAF because so much of their work was at sea and long range. The Catalina could stay in the air up to 30-hours, so as a patrol bomber working with naval ships it proved deadly against enemy submarines.
My friend Jack Geratic in Canada has spent many hours researching the PBY with me and I greatly appreciate his work.
At this point you may have noticed the tail section is missing. The original Monogram model last released around 1997 had a design issue, generally called 'tail bloat'. The tail section was much wider than the actual aircraft and had a negative impact on the appearance. Since there have not been any tooling changes and this model is out of production, I decided to use a resin replacement tail manufactured by Blicher Bits in Canada. It requires a lot of body work, but I hope it will better represent the original lines of the PBY Catalina when I finish.