Thanks all for looking in and your comments.
picking up on the cockpit green point you are right there are better matches supposedly, but having worked in both the aircraft and defence industry as the person that purchases paint I have to say that it really does not matter. even today paint batches are different shades and I am fairly sure it was even worse in the 1940s. the pigment in the paint ages fades and darkens depending on what it is exposed to, so i don't worry to much about it. I do tend to struggle with Tamiya paint and airbrush so I am using Vallejo pale green, which by the time i have added a filter, a wash and some weathering will have a totally different tone. At the end of the day when my girlfriend looks at the finished model she won't pull me up on the green she will just say 'loverly' and then go and potter off lol
so with that out of the way and my Eduard etch delivered lets get cracking...
build starts with the cockpit, i built up a number of sub assemblies allowing for painting parts on mass. You will note some faces have been filed flat in readiness for installing the etch parts. NOTE for anybody who may be building this and using the tame how to build book as a reference, there are a number of errors the first couple being in the cockpit where the kit supplied etch has been installed upside down!(see my second pic for correct orientation)
As you would expect from Tamiya the clean up is minimal and the fit very good, so far. the little round window in the bulkhead above the pilot seat is cleverly moulded as part of a wider clear part, I guess to avoid the risk of the glazing fogging from glue, although there is a second half that is glued in. Kit supplied paint masks allow for easy painting.
All the pilots dials have their backs and are hollow, so if you wanted to spend the time installing wires this is very doable. once all the sub assemblies where built up as far as i could everything was primed in Halfords grey. and then painted Pale green. once everything was dry I started to pick out the individual parts that need brush painting. just a note at this point there is a lot of black in the cockpit too, so i have decided to contrast the semi gloss black of various pieces of equipment and the matt black of rubber parts by painting the seats dark bluegrey. This will allow for a black wash to hi light texture and will ad some contrast and depth to the overall cockpit, or i should say I am hoping it will
any comments feedback etc all welcomed
Jase
picking up on the cockpit green point you are right there are better matches supposedly, but having worked in both the aircraft and defence industry as the person that purchases paint I have to say that it really does not matter. even today paint batches are different shades and I am fairly sure it was even worse in the 1940s. the pigment in the paint ages fades and darkens depending on what it is exposed to, so i don't worry to much about it. I do tend to struggle with Tamiya paint and airbrush so I am using Vallejo pale green, which by the time i have added a filter, a wash and some weathering will have a totally different tone. At the end of the day when my girlfriend looks at the finished model she won't pull me up on the green she will just say 'loverly' and then go and potter off lol
so with that out of the way and my Eduard etch delivered lets get cracking...
build starts with the cockpit, i built up a number of sub assemblies allowing for painting parts on mass. You will note some faces have been filed flat in readiness for installing the etch parts. NOTE for anybody who may be building this and using the tame how to build book as a reference, there are a number of errors the first couple being in the cockpit where the kit supplied etch has been installed upside down!(see my second pic for correct orientation)
As you would expect from Tamiya the clean up is minimal and the fit very good, so far. the little round window in the bulkhead above the pilot seat is cleverly moulded as part of a wider clear part, I guess to avoid the risk of the glazing fogging from glue, although there is a second half that is glued in. Kit supplied paint masks allow for easy painting.
All the pilots dials have their backs and are hollow, so if you wanted to spend the time installing wires this is very doable. once all the sub assemblies where built up as far as i could everything was primed in Halfords grey. and then painted Pale green. once everything was dry I started to pick out the individual parts that need brush painting. just a note at this point there is a lot of black in the cockpit too, so i have decided to contrast the semi gloss black of various pieces of equipment and the matt black of rubber parts by painting the seats dark bluegrey. This will allow for a black wash to hi light texture and will ad some contrast and depth to the overall cockpit, or i should say I am hoping it will

any comments feedback etc all welcomed
Jase
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