Jump to content

VAUTOUR IIN "Cyrano Radar" - 1:72 Special Hobby


Julien

Recommended Posts

VAUTOUR IIN "Cyrano Radar"
1:72 Special Hobby

box.jpg

The Sud Aviation Vautour (Vulture) stems from a 1951 request from the Armée de l'Air for a jet aircraft capable as acting as a bomber, light attack aircraft, or an all weather interceptor. The renamed Vautour II would subsequently be built in all three versions, entering service in 1958, and leaving active front line service in 1978. Various test aircraft stayed around through to the 1990's. The aircraft would feature an all metal fuselage with a mid fuselage mounted wing. The engines were mounted in underslung pods. A distinguishing feature of the aircraft was the main undercarriage units on the centre line with outriggers in the engine pods. The Cyrano Radar was originally developed for the Mirage but were fitted to some Vautours for testing and one such aircraft was sold to Israel.

The Aircraft would never see any combat with the Armée de l'Air, however it would with its only export customer the Israeli Defence Forces. Israel purchased 28 Vautours and they were used in the six day war and the War of Attrition. In fact the type did score an aerial victory over an Iraqi Hunter. 15 aircraft were lost to combat and they were replaced by Skyhawks in 1971.

The Kit
The original of the kit date back to the Azur kit which was new in 2011. This kit represents a Vautour IIN two seat all weather interceptor version with the Cyrano radar nose. You get the original kit with the new nose and drop tanks in resin. There are also a good number of additional resin parts including the camera pods under the test aircrafts engine pods. TBH a lot of the resin parts are very small and it looks like it might be difficult to separate them without causing damage. The man plastic parts are good quality with restrained panel lines. Films are provided for the instrument panels, and to round things off there is a small PE fret.

v01.JPG

To kick things off in the construction depart we start with the cockpit (shock). The two seats are made up each with four plastic parts, and PE seatbelts. The rudder pedals attach to the back of the instrument panel and this is then added to the coaming. The cockpit is then made up with the other side of the cockpit floor being the roof of the front gear bay. The rear bulkhead is added along with the mid bulkhead between the two cockpits. Side consoles are then added to the front & rear pits. The control column is added as are the seats.

v02.JPG

The underside bulkheads for the front gear bay are added. The front main gear leg is then built up. This is a complicated part with the main leg, upper scissor parts and reaction mechanism all to be built up. The twin wheels can then be added. Once this is finished, the complete cockpit along with the rear main gear well can be added to the fuselage halves and they can be closed up. The rudder is then added.

v03.JPG

.

v04.JPG


Once the main fuselage is complete the attention moves to the wings. these are one part in the main for each side with only the inner wing needing a second part. The wings are then added. The engine pods are made up from two halves and the modeller needs to put in the intake, resin exhaust and wheel wells for the out rigger wheels which were contained in the engine pods. Once complete the pods are attached to the wings.

v05.JPG

The radar nose is then added after the normal nose has been removed along the panel line, the gun ports will also need to be filled in. The the front gear bay doors and the rear gear strut & wheels are added.. The tailplanes are added along with the POE wing fences, and rear gear doors. The outrigger gears need then to be built up and installed into the engine pods. This is followed by the doors to these pods. Lastly the external tanks and camera pods are added if needed.

Clear parts
These are clear and distortion free.

v07.JPG


Markings
Markings for 4 aircraft are provided. The decals are by Cartograf, are in register, bright, and have minimal carrier film. The blues on the Israli markings are good, the camera washed them out a bit, it was blinded by the day-glo markings!
  • No.348 CEV Flight Test Centre. Bretgny-sur-Orge, France 1990.
  • No.337 CEV Flight Test Centre. Bretgny-sur-Orge, France 1980.
  • No.70 "Fantomas" Natural Metal Finish, Israeli Defence Forces.
  • No.70 "Fantomas" 3 colour camo, Israeli Defence Forces.

v06.JPG


Conclusion
An unusual looking aircraft which can be built in trials or operational schemes. Very highly recommended.




bin-new.jpg

Review sample courtesy of

logo.gif

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Many thanks, Julien

But,

The Aircraft would never see any combat with the Armée de l'Air, however it would with its only export customer the Israeli Defence Forces. Israel purchased 28 Vautours and they were used in the six day war and the War of Attrition. In fact the type did score an aerial victory over an Iraqi Hunter. 15 aircraft were lost to combat and they were replaced by Skyhawks in 1971.

That's not exactly true.

Some Vautour IIN from Normandie Niemen were detached under the unit designation ECTT 2/6 (Escadron de Chasse Tout Temps, All Weather Fighter Squadron) at Oran-La-Sénia late in 1960, to cover Algeria against smugglers flights bringing weapons to the FLN.

The overall story of French night fighters over Algeria is not well known or well publicized, but it's nearly certains that a few kills were registered, maybe by Vautour, but more probably by Dassault MD315 (Mk.X equipped), B-26 or Meteors.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi there

Well this Vatour aircraft was thing for Armee'l Air and IDF fans all ovr the world in the wonderfull 1/72 scale for a long time

In my particular case I even consider to try to scratch it (please notice operative word consider) specially after Isradecal issue their decal set anyway after about 10-15 years waiting Special hobbies made their sets and one thing missing was their underwing fuel tanks so here they are included in the kit review above or here

https://www.hannants.co.uk/product/KORDSM7221

KORDSM7221.jpg

a bit espensive yes but at least there is a solution

Best day

Armando

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...

I heard that the canopy on the original was not the correct shape. Can anybody confirm this?

Hi there

Well regarding that long ago I post at ARC the launching of the Special Hobby Vautours and recieved this drawing but sincerely not a way for me to know how accurate it is !!!

So here my 0.02 cents

porwnanie3.jpg

Best day

Armando

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...