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Dassault Mirage IV P  C'est Fini| 1:72 A&A Models


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Launched on November 28, 1956, by Dassault, the Mirage IV program resulted in the twin-engine fighter-bomber prototype named Mirage IV 01 taking-off on June 17, 1969. Two years later, on October 12, 1961, the first Mirage IV A took off, opening a series of 4 prototypes and 62 production aircraft.
The 33-ton plane could fly twice the speed of sound at an altitude of 18,000 meters, and thanks to the in-flight refueling, the range was practically limited only by the crew's capabilities.

The plane that is the subject of this gallery has been one of the five aircraft kept in a flyable condition since 1995 for carrying out long-range reconnaissance missions and electronic warfare.

On June 6, 2005, as part of the official end-of-service ceremony, Eric Pintat, Commander and Chief of Operation of the "Gascogne" squadron, and René Dupré, Deputy Commander of the unit, took the last flight.

Mirage IV P n ° 59 Charlie Foxtrot is currently located at 110 Creil Airbase.

But it was not the last Mirage IV P flight.

On Thursday, June 30, 2005, at 12:05, Mirage IV P n ° 62, the last Mirage IV to leave the Dassault production lines, landed on the Le Bourget museum lane after flying from 118 "Colonel Rozanoff" airbase in Mont-de -Marsan. It is now one of the exhibits of the Museum of Aviation and Astronautics Le Bourget.

C'est Fini!

I can recommend A&A Models only to experienced modelers, a very demanding short-run kit, with poor details and poor fitting of parts.
Painted with Vallejo metallizers, Tamiya and Gunze paints, wash by Modelers World, subtle oil shading by Smoke Abteilung 502.
Syhart Decals, great to work with, although a bit thick.
ResKit wheels. Refueling probe - Master. Pavla's seats in the cockpit, practically invisible through small and thick windows.

So, here it is!

 

86qbfk.jpg

 

5W7rlu.jpg

 

XyBrcn.jpg

 

lTaevv.jpg

 

nSRVto.jpg

 

OWEFoN.jpg

 

6jmvfc.jpg

 

6tWH7k.jpg

 

2KM7wF.jpg

 

vnyoWv.jpg

 

P3Fa0o.jpg

 

2OO2Gf.jpg

 

SCNias.jpg

 

 

And some under construction photos:

 

Rz5eO1.jpg

 

D1CunE.jpg

 

nIKyBb.jpg

 

nwUQyV.jpg

 

dArQe6.jpg

 

nxmT5s.jpg

 

B9rNFq.jpg

 

LcE1EN.jpg

 

7EOvi4.jpg

 

v1Rh4j.jpg

 

Su0whl.jpg

 

ae9rXU.jpg
 

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Hello there,

 

Nicely done. I have the same kit, ready about 50%, I can tell that the kit looks much better in the box and really demands a lot of work to progress...

I collect some mojo from your build.

Good craftmanship.

 

Regards, Laszlo

 

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15 hours ago, billn53 said:

Wow! That will certainly add a spash of color to your collection!

 

16 hours ago, Hubert said:

Launched on November 28, 1956, by Dassault, the Mirage IV program resulted in the twin-engine fighter-bomber prototype named Mirage IV 01 taking-off on June 17, 1969. Two years later, on October 12, 1961, the first Mirage IV A took off, opening a series of 4 prototypes and 62 production aircraft.
The 33-ton plane could fly twice the speed of sound at an altitude of 18,000 meters, and thanks to the in-flight refueling, the range was practically limited only by the crew's capabilities.

The plane that is the subject of this gallery has been one of the five aircraft kept in a flyable condition since 1995 for carrying out long-range reconnaissance missions and electronic warfare.

On June 6, 2005, as part of the official end-of-service ceremony, Eric Pintat, Commander and Chief of Operation of the "Gascogne" squadron, and René Dupré, Deputy Commander of the unit, took the last flight.

Mirage IV P n ° 59 Charlie Foxtrot is currently located at 110 Creil Airbase.

But it was not the last Mirage IV P flight.

On Thursday, June 30, 2005, at 12:05, Mirage IV P n ° 62, the last Mirage IV to leave the Dassault production lines, landed on the Le Bourget museum lane after flying from 118 "Colonel Rozanoff" airbase in Mont-de -Marsan. It is now one of the exhibits of the Museum of Aviation and Astronautics Le Bourget.

C'est Fini!

I can recommend A&A Models only to experienced modelers, a very demanding short-run kit, with poor details and poor fitting of parts.
Painted with Vallejo metallizers, Tamiya and Gunze paints, wash by Modelers World, subtle oil shading by Smoke Abteilung 502.
Syhart Decals, great to work with, although a bit thick.
ResKit wheels. Refueling probe - Master. Pavla's seats in the cockpit, practically invisible through small and thick windows.

So, here it is!

 

86qbfk.jpg

 

5W7rlu.jpg

 

XyBrcn.jpg

 

lTaevv.jpg

 

nSRVto.jpg

 

OWEFoN.jpg

 

6jmvfc.jpg

 

6tWH7k.jpg

 

2KM7wF.jpg

 

vnyoWv.jpg

 

P3Fa0o.jpg

 

2OO2Gf.jpg

 

SCNias.jpg

 

 

And some under construction photos:

 

Rz5eO1.jpg

 

D1CunE.jpg

 

nIKyBb.jpg

 

nwUQyV.jpg

 

dArQe6.jpg

 

nxmT5s.jpg

 

B9rNFq.jpg

 

LcE1EN.jpg

 

7EOvi4.jpg

 

v1Rh4j.jpg

 

Su0whl.jpg

 

ae9rXU.jpg
 

Very very nice

PM

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@Hubert: I'm really lost for words at your work on this kit!  The results are outstanding, and I appreciate your including a brief stage-by-stage series of photos to help us better understand what you had to work with to get to the final product.

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Superb work & very colourful scheme.

Just wondering, did the kit come with an insert plug to cover the Nuclear recess? Or did you just cut out your own. I always wondered how the underside of the P version compared to the Nuclear carrying version.

 

Martin

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Great many thanks for all your comments!

 

It's not a shake'n'bake kit indeed, and there was a moment I just wanted to throw it against the wall. The fuselage halves were warped, the cockpit (especially the instrument panel) didn't fit, the front fuselage was of a different diameter (too narrow by 1 mm) than the nosecone ..., and the gaps, gaps, gaps. Anyway, it all has been manageable to some extent. :) Surely could have replaced the exhaust nozzles or at least paint them better, it is probably one of the weakest points. 

The kit seems fine in the box, as Tripio and Space Ranger wrote, but it's only the first impression. The closer examination reveals that the panel lines are inconsistent, there is a lot of sink marks, the details are rather "soapy", and all the parts need some or major cleanup. 

 

However, the plane is so beautiful that it is worth the effort.

 

6 hours ago, Lightningboy2000 said:

Just wondering, did the kit come with an insert plug to cover the Nuclear recess? Or did you just cut out your own. I always wondered how the underside of the P version compared to the Nuclear carrying version.

 

It was in the box and fit surprisingly well. There's also the recon container (the halves of which, of course, do not match each other, thankfully there's the resin replacement available), which is one of the differences between A and P version. It mainly included avionics - navigation and targeting systems, and the installation of an external under-fuselage deep centerline pylon for carrying the ASMP missile or the mentioned CT 52 reconnaissance container.

 

Hubert

 

 

 

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Hello,

 

As far as the soapy surface details are concerned: inconsistent lines are begging you to make rescribing. From that perspective Heller could be a better choice when you decide to do that, at least you do not need to correct the already existing lines.

Anyway, example above shows that with proper approach, skills and tricks (spacers inside the fuselage) it can be built to an amazing model.

 

Regards, Laszlo

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