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Showing results for tags 'corrugated wonder'.
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Just think of it for a moment: An all-metal, cantilever monoplane passenger "airliner"... in 1919. Derived actually from other Junkers designs of WWI that followed the same principles: all-metal monoplanes, using pioneering techniques that will later spread to other manufacturers ("corrugated" metal plane examples exist by the bunch in later aviation history) and spearheading the future of aviation as it is today. This is a plane that had the great honor of carrying Sigmund Freud: https://www.alamy.com/sigmund-freud-1930-neg16-image5542713.html and Albert Einstein: https://www.junkers.de/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/ABJ_590_J13_226_Portfolio_Sein_Leben_Web_05_2019-1080x720.jpg It seems truly incredible that aviation conservative -when not plain retrograde- thinking would insist with braced biplanes of wood and canvas for many, many years to follow. In any case, the Junkers F.13 is a plane that was built by the hundreds and was sold to and operated in many countries, including Bolivia, Colombia and Argentina among the first. The Revell kit has been around for a while, and indeed Revell should be commended for releasing a kit of an iconic civil plane that was used world-wide (even in South America, China, Russia and Japan) that also, being corrugated, was perhaps not easy to produce. I have built the Revell kit before, OOB, but now wanted a bit more of excitement, therefore I plunged into my F.13e folder, for hours and hours and hours. It was obvious from the beginning that the Revell kit, as it is, covers a very narrow swath of the production, all earlier types, and not even near all of those either. Revell has released this kit in many boxings as a landplane and hydroplane, with many marks. I built the Austrian passenger carrier version: I remember from the build that the kit seemed nice, had some issues regarding accuracy, the fit in general was good but with a few exceptions (the prop dangled down loose a bit, for example) and the decals were DISMAL, a thick cake that won't, at any cost, comply with the corrugations. I have read this same complaint many times after from other modelers. I got a freshly baked, 2020 boxing, with many fancy Revell treats: a full color, large, multipage assembly booklet and decals printed in 2020, hopefully better than the despicable decal thick cake of old. The sprues include the floats and ancillaries, but the clear parts came unprotected in the same bag with them, fortunately preserving their clarity.