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Tamiya 1/48 P-47D Thunderbolt "Razorback", SEAC 1945 (*Old post, replaced photos*)


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This is HB981, a Republic P-47D-22-RE Thunderbolt attached to 135 Sq. RAF in Burma during 1945. At 04:45 on 2nd May 1945 it was taking off from Akyab Main to provide "cab rank" support for the Operation Dracula landings at Rangoon, when it lost power and ground-looped off the end of the runway, tearing off both wings in the process.

135-Sq.-Op-Rec-book.jpg

 

Its relevance to me is that the aircraft contained my father at the time it performed this unplanned evolution. After the aircraft had come to rest, he popped out of the cockpit unharmed, then popped back in again to retrieve his parachute, since it was a chargeable offence to lose a parachute. Then he jogged back to the end of the runway, sat on the parachute, and waited for a vehicle to come and get him. At which point he cadged a cigarette off the driver.

Shortly after that, he had his photograph taken, posing on the wreckage. (The photograph, you'll see, also had a fairly hectic later life.)

crash.jpg

 

The story is retold amusingly in Roger Freeman's Thunderbolt: A Documentary History Of The Republic P-47.

 

freeman.jpg

(The squadron number is wrong - 135 Sq. didn't renumber to 615 until slightly later in the war.)

 

 

Paints are Tamiya, LifeColor and Alclad. The 150-gallon (US) drop tanks are filched from a Tamiya P-47M kit, but the Hamilton prop (and its decals) came with the Razorback kit, although it's not required for either of the aircraft detailed in that kit. SEAC roundels, flashes and the tail number come from an Xtradecal "Yanks with Roundels" sheet. Eduard photoetch detail and placards, Squadron wheels, and an HGW Sutton harness which I found almost unusable.

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P47-5.jpg

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Finally, a comparison of the Thunderbolt and Hurricane, showing what a brute the Jug was in comparison. (My father used to take great delight in relaying the old RAF joke about how the easiest way to avoid enemy fire in a Thunderbolt was to release your harness and run around in the cockpit.)

P47-Hurri.jpg

 

Possibly the drabbest Jug ever modelled. Sorry about that.

 

 

 

Edited by Hamiltonian
Freeman quote added; then fixed some photos
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Not at all. I think that is one of the coolest Jugs ever modelled. Something really different and with a personal story behind it. 

The only thing is I think your images may have a red cast to them which isn't helping the greens. My camera does the same thing. 

The new images look a lot better now. Excellent work all round.👍👍

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25 minutes ago, Greg Law said:

Not at all. I think that is one of the coolest Jugs ever modelled. Something really different and with a personal story behind it. 

The only thing is I think your images may have a red cast to them which isn't helping the greens. My camera does the same thing. 

Thanks. It's not a red cast in the camera, it's taking daylight photos in a room with deep pink wallpaper! Tweaking the colour temperature helped a little, but I should just avoid that room in future.

The slightly wider images are long daylight exposures on a tripod, to get depth of field, and they all came out with a catastrophic pink cast from the wallpaper. Even tweaking the RAWs doesn't fix it entirely, as you've noticed (damn).

The other images are taken with a handheld compact camera using a fluorescent work lamp in a back room, which I thought would turn out rubbish, but which I now very much prefer.

Edited by Hamiltonian
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21 minutes ago, Hamiltonian said:

Thanks. It's not a red cast in the camera, it's taking daylight photos in a room with deep pink wallpaper! Tweaking the colour temperature helped a little, but I should just avoid that room in future.

The slightly wider images are long daylight exposures on a tripod, to get depth of field, and they all came out with a catastrophic pink cast from the wallpaper. Even tweaking the RAWs doesn't fix it entirely, as you've noticed (damn).

The other images are taken with a handheld compact camera using a fluorescent work lamp in a back room, which I thought would turn out rubbish, but which I now very much prefer.

That sounds right to me. I had the same problem with my Oscar closeup images when I first made them. I got a red cast from the curtains. I had to wait till the morning which was a nice overcast day and they turned out a lot better.

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4 minutes ago, Greg Law said:

That sounds right to me. I had the same problem with my Oscar closeup images when I first made them. I got a red cast from the curtains. I had to wait till the morning which was a nice overcast day and they turned out a lot better.

Yes, you're right, I should probably revisit them. Maybe a tripod and the daylight fluorescent is the way ahead. South-facing daylight just seemed like such a good idea at the time!

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16 minutes ago, tonyot said:

That`s a beauty and the Hurricane is no slouch either,......... great job,

Cheers

         Tony

You're kind, thanks. (You've previously pointed out the counter-historical red spinner on that Hurricane, but I still haven't got around to changing it.)

There's a striking difference in the Pale Blue of the two sets of SEAC roundels on the two aircraft, which I hadn't really thought about until I saw them together. The Hurricane roundels came from a badly behaved Almark sheet I bought on eBay, and to me they now seem implausibly oversaturated.

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That's no plain Jane- she's a beaut! The CBI Jugs are not modeled nearly as often as the ETO ones, but are very distinctive regarding their color scheme. The P-38 external tanks really set the model off, as well. BTW, I noticed you used a Sutton harness in your build- do you have any information regarding its use in P-47's? I am working on a P-47D Razorback from No. 73 OTU at Fayid, Egypt, but haven't gotten any answer to the query I posted a while back on fitment of Sutton or U.S. harness in Lend-lease Jugs.

The Tamiya Jugs in both 1/72 and 1/48 scale are incredible kits!

Mike

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11 hours ago, 72modeler said:

That's no plain Jane- she's a beaut! The CBI Jugs are not modeled nearly as often as the ETO ones, but are very distinctive regarding their color scheme. The P-38 external tanks really set the model off, as well. BTW, I noticed you used a Sutton harness in your build- do you have any information regarding its use in P-47's? I am working on a P-47D Razorback from No. 73 OTU at Fayid, Egypt, but haven't gotten any answer to the query I posted a while back on fitment of Sutton or U.S. harness in Lend-lease Jugs.

The Tamiya Jugs in both 1/72 and 1/48 scale are incredible kits!

Mike

Thanks for the kind words, Mike. In researching the harness, I ran into the maze of claim and counterclaim that you've also encountered, no doubt. I also spent quite a lot of time examining grainy photos with a magnifying glass, but could never convince myself one way or the other. Eventually I just went with what seemed to be the majority view by a narrow margin, and fitted the Sutton.

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Wonderful P-47, and great job on the finish.  As your dad can attest to, those Jugs were about the sturdiest plane out there.  I always liked that joke about running around in its cockpit to avoid enemy fire!

 

Cheers,

 

Mark

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5 hours ago, Habu12 said:

Not dirty enough! 😉

Jeez-o, the last time I posted an aircraft build here I was told it was too dirty.😊

 

But the question of how dirty HB981 should actually be is interesting (at least it is to me). It was part of a batch that, according to Geoff Thomas's book, was delivered in March-May 1944. Halley's "Royal Air Force Aircraft" has it serving only with 135 Sq. But it doesn't actually turn up on the 135 Operational Record until April 1945, and flew only five sorties before it was DBRed. Had it been in unrecorded service with some other squadron prior to its service with 135, or had it been one of the large number of Thunderbolts that were in temporary storage in India, waiting to be issued as replacements? If the latter is the case, I've maybe made HB981 too dirty, too.

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I always think aircraft look good in a SEAC scheme & yours is a blinder. I did my razorback in a similar scheme, just need a bubbletop to complement it. A nice bit of family history too. 

 

Pete

Edited by Buzby061
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