QUOTE: aerialresponder wrote:
would love to have that commander in 1/48! beautiful. |
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Hi Kyle,
Yes, a 1/48 example of that plane would be great... maybe someday some company will mold Bob Hoover's "Shrike" in 1/48... (yeah, whatever)
QUOTE: roadkill_275 wrote:
That is just awesome. Didn't even know this one existed. There are more out there than I thought. Found out yesterday that Minicraft makes a 1/48 Cessna 172 with floats. I'm gonna need that to go with my 180 on floats! |
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Besides the Aero Commander, Aurora made several very cool GA models back in the day, including an old
Cessna 310 "Skynight", http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=1189&item=5906524303&rd=1,
Jet Commander,
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=1189&item=5906248637&rd=1,
Piper Apache,
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=1189&item=5906151170&rd=1,
and a
Piper Cherokee 180,
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=1189&item=5905899889&rd=1,
although the picture of the kit itself look like a "140"..................... all of which are currently listed on E-Bay
I just looked up the Minicraft 172 on Google, and it appears to be the same mold as the Modelcraft kit. The kit has the long Dorsal Fin, which indicates it's a post 1970 version.... however, the wheel pants, aft cabin and side window frames are from a pre-70's version. I'm building mine as a 1976 172M, so if you are too, and the mold's are the same, the Minicraft kit is going to require quite a bit of alteration to make it accurate. I'm going to include a diagram of the modifications when I post my finished product to the GB, but in brief;
(1) Center fuselage wing mounting surface must be lowered (bottom of the wing is too far above the tops of the door windows), which basically removes the solid roof over the back seat, which must be scratched/sanded/filled back in.
(1a) Dropping the wings means the kit supplied windshield is no longer going to fit, so a new winshield must be vacuformed using the kit supplied one as the mold, then the appropriate amount trimmed from the bottom edge.
(2) Back and side window frames must be altered, which requires the use of scratch built window transparencies.
(2a) If the door windows are going to be positioned open, you can use those supplied in the kit.
(3) The wheel pants....
(it is better to not even speak of them) Grrrrrrr
The plane I'm modeling it after, however, had the wheel pants removed not too long after it was purchased, so unless I'm re-inspired, the model will be "pant-less" also.
I'm going to display it diorama style, about 1 scale ft. above blurred runway numbers, with blurred prop, as if it is in a "Flare", just about to touch down. Written on the bottom center of the display case will be the words; "On the Numbers"
Take care,
Frank