billybigbananas Posted July 17, 2012 Share Posted July 17, 2012 Ah, Nostalgia.... Remember the 90's? When you could go out with just a £50 note in your pocket - see Oasis or Blur at the Camden Underworld, have a couple of pints & a bag of chips, buy a 1/72 Hasegawa model kit and still have the bus fare home? No, me neither - but this model kit was certainly one I bought in the 90's, one of the numerous reboxings of the Prowler that have gone by over the years. I also at some point picked up an Eduard etch set for it, although (probably due to my incompetence) I just couldn't get on with it. In fact anyone wanting to see some modelling excellence may want to leave now, lest they tear out their own eyes at the hash I managed to make of things along the way..... Everything started brightly enough - I wanted to do an open cockpit, so I used the Eduard parts plus a little bit of scratch build to liven up the cockpit. It won't win any awards, but I was pretty pleased with it. After opening up the required hole and assembling the rather smart Eduard avionics bay, when it came to test fit it with the cockpit, I just couldn't for the life of me get everything to sit nicely so after "you're going in the bin" moment #1, I reached for the filler and plastic card to refill the hole I'd so lovingly cut out. I then made up the cockpit, again using the Eduard bits and everything was going swimmingly until I tried to join the fuselage halves and yes, you've guessed it, the flippin' etched front instrument panel wouldn't fit no matter how much I fiddled with it. So with - crushing inevitability - I gave up my hopes of finally being able to do an open cockpit model that didn't look complete pants. "Welcome back to closed cockpits anonymous Mr Bananas - we knew you'd be back." So, after using the internationally recognised technique of 'bending some bits until it all goes in', it was on with the canopy. The main body went together without any major problems, it's a really nice kit to work with & eveything fitted well. Bit of filler around the wing roots & the engines but nothing troublesome. So, back on track & time for painting Except guess what? Didn't have the right paint. Thought I did but when I checked my big paint basket - I'm a rattlecan (ab)user - The shade I needed for the top surfaces wasn't there. It also wasn't available from any of my usual online retailers so I was a bit stuck. Here's a PROTIP : Buy stuff at model shows when you see it, then you won't have to spend half a day on the internet working out whether it's worth paying £40 to have a tinlet of paint shipped from Ulan Bator. In retrospect I should have just sprayed the whole thing in the lower surface colour (it's a two tone grey scheme but the difference is pretty imperceptible unless you're really looking closely), however hindsights a wonderful thing. So out came a tin of Humbrol enamel and my half inch decorator's brush and on it went, slap, slap. slap. For a brush finish it didn't come out too bad actually. The underside got the spray treatment, couple of coats of Quickshine to seal things and it was onto the decals. The decals were a mix of the original sheet from 1987 and a smaller 1993 sheet with the markings for this particular bird. Decal technology must have improved a good deal in 6 years. The originals were pretty hard work - clung to the backing paper for dear life then wrinkled up alarmingly on the application of microsol - there's a fair few that had to be coaxed back into one piece. The 1993 ones were far better, and really nice markings to boot. I don't do a lot of overall grey stuff but this looks pretty smart. After a couple more clear coats I then had to do some weathering. The brush job had filled a lot of the panel lines with paint, so I decided to create some visual interest by giving it a reasonably weathered look. I'm by no means an expert at this, but I'm fairly happy with the results I achieved with some washes and ground up pastels. I found that a little bit of brown (not really visible in the photos) pastel dust really made for some interesting highlights. Happy with that, and sensing the finishing line, it was now that the problems started again. Canopy masking is really not my strong point. I'm better at using etch sets than I am canopy masking, and look how well that turned out..... So off came the masking tape and yup, there were the bleeds to greet me with a cheery wave. It's not like the prowler has a teeny tiny glazed section either, more like a greenhouse with some pilots inside it. Lovely ragged edges on the front cockpit framing as well. "You're going in the bin!" moment #2. Sigh. Out came the cocktail stick, the white spirit soaked cotton buds and the swearing. Closely followed by the scuffed up canopy, the masking tape, the paintbrush and more swearing. It still looks rough as arseholes, but we'll chalk it up to experience and move on shall we? Nothing to see here.... Fed up now I decided to get the undercarriage on. Can't go far wrong there, right? Wrong wrong wrong. Now on most undercarriages the compression links face backwards, yes? Not on this one bud. It appears that Mr Gruman, after returning from a heavy session at the pub one lunchtime, decreed that all A6's and their variants should have their compression links facing forwards. "Just do it!" he is reported to have yelled at terrified designers "I'll make those damn modellers pay, oh yes!" before retiring to his office to sketch the B2 Spirit. No one knows why he hated modellers so, but he must have because I'll bet I'm not the first one to attach the main legs the wrong way round. An error that only became apparant as I tried to attatch the retraction arms and finding they wouldn't fit. And then snapping one of the legs off as I tried to swap them round. "You're going in the bin!!!!" moment #3 .........deep breath, leave it alone for a couple of days, come back and have a look. A better modeller would throw it away, no doubt. It's rough, the canopy is rubbish, the legs are on the wrong way round. but.... It has character, it certainly looks like a prowler, If I squint a bit I can imagine it swooping in to land on a crowded carrier. And there's a little bit of me invested in there somewhere. I superglued the leg back on, added all the dangly bits and put it on the back of the display shelf. Thanks for reading. Phill Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bri48 Posted July 17, 2012 Share Posted July 17, 2012 (edited) It looks ok to me Billy/Phill and an interesting story that goes with it. I'm into the fridge now for a beer! Edited July 17, 2012 by Bri48 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HOUSTON Posted July 17, 2012 Share Posted July 17, 2012 Phil, Nice ot hear your nostalgic memories... GREAT looking Prowler....GOOD JOB Sir, HOUSTON. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mike DeTorrice Posted July 18, 2012 Share Posted July 18, 2012 Wonderfully done Prowler you have completed. She looks excellent and LOL ..... your write-up is excellent ! Mike Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bri48 Posted July 18, 2012 Share Posted July 18, 2012 Man, apart from spilling a whole blob of superglue over it that has got to be one of the worst canopy fittings i've seen and the experience of construction has made my day again....LOL. Brian Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Plasticbutcher Posted July 18, 2012 Share Posted July 18, 2012 Ah Billy, nothing wrong with a bit of character my friend. £50 eh? I saw Simple Minds, U2 and Big Country in 1983 for £7.50 and got a Matchbox Sea Fury with the change of a Tenner. Nice Prowler. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
robw_uk Posted July 18, 2012 Share Posted July 18, 2012 nice - built this kit (different boxing I guess) last year, you have made a fine job of her..... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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