As per the title. Just read this on another forum and it has been confirmed by the owner. Kitty Hawk Models will be shutting down and will not be producing any more models/moulds.
Kitty Hawk Models Shutting Down
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Probably not — this appears to be about the Chinese manufacturer of mostly aircraft kits that has been around only since 2012.Comment
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They did subjects others never wanted to do such as cold war jets was and helicopters so, the market was always going to be more limited and their accuracy was not fantastic for certain things. But that being said, at least they gave it a shot and made the modeller have to work to produce a finished article rather than a Tamiya 'shake & bake' approach.Comment
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WELL Guys if this is the K/H kit company that i bought one of their kits an it was terrible fit an it was quite exspensive i bought a jaguar kit an like i said i had to do major surgury on the fusalagere to get the main undercart to fit with a dremel an a diamon cutter an the engine covers were also a terrible fit an someone eles on here had the same probs with their same kit an i think an they said they wont buy another of their kits so i think that if no one buys their kits because of this then there is only one opishion
chrisComment
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I would not have wished them to go bust, but they certainly did themselves no favours producing poor quality kits and trying to sell them at premium prices.
Yes they did produce some great subjects the 1/32 OV-10 and F5 are the two that stand out to me, but the OV-10, expensive as it is, was a horror of a kit, they got everything wrong that they possibly could get wrong, the worse kit I have ever cut plastic on by a wide margin. The F5 was better, at least it went together but was certainly not a fun build and it needed a lot of patience. The worse thing of all were the prices for such crap, charging three times what Revell would charge for kits falling well short of even Revells worse….
it also seems that they were not interested in feedback and never learned from their mistakes. It is interesting to compare their journey over the last 6/7 years with ICM over the same period. ICM started off producing some crap kits but they listened to feedback and have just kept improving with every release. I look at their 1/32 releases and we see affordable quality kits of interesting subjects that I would rate nearly as highly as Tamiya. I have also bought several of their 1/48 releases and I am very impressed indeed. Look at their 1/48 JU88, in the box it looks just outstanding and it’s under £30… build reviews are glowing too. (John has some in stock….)
With companies like ICM, HKM, Tamiya and Zoukie Mura producing outstanding kits of great subjects there just isn’t any room for a company like KH anymore. I would add Meng, GWH and even Trumpeter/Hobbyboss to the mix of worthwhile producers.Comment
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Interesting that in Barry's post Airfix and Revell did not get a mention.
Wingnut Wings made superb kits but the market they aimed at was too small to sustain the business so the plug was pulled.
Kitty Hawk on the other hand probably had the same marketing problem it would appear, so if they had quality issues as well?Comment
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Interesting that in Barry's post Airfix and Revell did not get a mention.
Wingnut Wings made superb kits but the market they aimed at was too small to sustain the business so the plug was pulled.
Kitty Hawk on the other hand probably had the same marketing problem it would appear, so if they had quality issues as well?
The choice of subjects related directly to the owners own private passion. Which explains the work and detail that was put into the kits! It might be that the customer base was not the largest, but everything they made was ripped off the shops shelves quicker than they could fill them.
Kitty Hawk on the other hand just made some real duffers of kits. The word got out and the internet made sure everybody got to know. They had an OK line up of some good subjects.
The kits are not impossible to build but they take a lot of work. Work a lot of builders where not expecting to have to do on a modern produced kit.Comment
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Wingnut was closed as a direct result of the Pandemic. The production was closed due to lock downs the staff still got paid. The money ran out. It is a shame that a company oof any kind gets beaten down like that. Fortunately most of the tooling went to good homes.
The choice of subjects related directly to the owners own private passion. Which explains the work and detail that was put into the kits! It might be that the customer base was not the largest, but everything they made was ripped off the shops shelves quicker than they could fill them.
Kitty Hawk on the other hand just made some real duffers of kits. The word got out and the internet made sure everybody got to know. They had an OK line up of some good subjects.
The kits are not impossible to build but they take a lot of work. Work a lot of builders where not expecting to have to do on a modern produced kit.
chrisComment
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I too have the Jag in the stash... Saw it and thought yeah new tooled Jag. Rather worried when I read all the negative feed back on t'interweb. Its still in the stash! One day when I am brave enough I might get into it and do a thread so we can all have a laugh.Comment
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WHAT A DISSAPOINTMENT for me as this kit promised so much but delivered so little Aaaaaaaaaggggghhhhhhhhhh
chrisComment
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I think Ian made a very valid point regarding 'reputation'. The internet and particularly social media can make or destroy a business. A few bad reviews which results in an explosion of negative comment online can destroy a company. A plumber once said to me "It can take years to get a good reputation but only a couple of bad jobs to destroy it". Maybe Kitty Hawk just succumbed to online negativity and consequently poor sales. If they made rubbish they didn't deserve to survive.
JimComment
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ATB
ChrisComment
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