To me, the
Spitfire was the most attractive aircraft to come out of WWII. One can easily see its parentage in the
racing aircraft of the 1930’s. The
legend of this aircraft will never be forgotten. It served on all fronts in many different
versions.
I have made
only one ProfiPack edition before, and it was a joy to work with. I love having the choice of markings, the PE
detail parts, and the canopy painting masks all in one box. I admit that I do not try to use all the PE
parts as some of them are so tiny that I really have trouble working with them. The pre-painted PE parts are wonderful,
although I suppose some purists think that they should come plain so the modeler
has to color them. I cannot say they
would be wrong, but then neither am I.
These models are made for my enjoyment and not to become a contest
winner. The hobby is for enjoyment and that
enjoyment is where you find it.
This
Spitfire was flown by 1st Lt. Leonard Helton, 52nd FG, 4th
FS, La Sebala Airfield, Tunisia, and June 1943.
The background on the Eduard instruction booklet is as follows:
“The US Army Air Force was one of the
Spitfire MK.IX operators in the Mediterranean Theatre of Operations. The 52nd
Fighter Group flew Spitfires till March /April 1944 when it was re-equipped
with the P-51 Mustang. The Group came to northern Africa as a part of the
invading Allied forces during Operation Torch that was launched on November 8,
1942. The British camouflage is topped up with US national insignia. At least
one British roundel was left on the left wing underside. The former markings
were over painted with fresh colors that seem to be darker than the rest of the
camouflage. The new code letters were added then. The yellow outline of the
national insignia was applied during Operation Torch to distinguish US aircraft
and frequently seen in the Mediterranean during the following months.”
We are used
to seeing American aircraft in the marking of another country, e.g., Great
Britain and USSR. However, I was
immediately drawn to the American markings on this Spitfire. It was one of five versions available in this
kit.
Here are some photos of the completed model:
Here are
some of the construction photos:
The instrument
panel comes on the PE fret, and has raised detail and is colored. It is made up
of two layers. Exceptionally nice.
The cockpit
details are very nice, particularly the armor plate behind the seat that is a
more scale thickness than the plastic piece that was included (They can only
make molded plastic pieces so thin). The
seat belts are also pre-colored.
I am not
sure what those tiny PE hooks are used for (tie down?), but they look neat. Eduard’s PE details really add a lot to the
finished model.
I masked
camouflage paint job, and it worked out okay.
Trying to reproduce the demarcation lines around the sides and over the
top to the other side is a challenge. I
used Tamiya tape and filled in the larger gaps with Frog tape. The model was primed with Vallejo Surface
Primer first and the color coats are all Vallejo Air paints. The Colored paint sticks very well to the primer
so there were no issues with color lifting from the plastic when the tape is
removed.
I cut masks
to cover the area where the RAF markings would have been placed. These areas were painted Olive Drab. Presumably the USAAF had plenty of that color on hand. The camouflage finish is RAF standard desert
pattern and color.
very nice indeed and a lovely result!
ReplyDeleteall the best
Neil
Thanks, Neil. I am doing something in 72nd scale next. The Spitfire is about my favorite WWII fighter.
ReplyDelete