Eduard 1/48 Hawker Tempest II
- BlackSheep214
- Elite Member
- Posts: 10530
- Joined: Sun Apr 06, 2014 8:47 pm
Re: Eduard 1/48 Hawker Tempest II
Geez… his cockpit in 1/48 scale is better than mine in all my 1/48 scale aircraft builds. Believe me, I’ve tried so hard to emulate your painting style.
“Who controls the skies, controls the fate of this Earth”
Author unknown- 352nd Fighter Group, Blue-Nosed Bastards of Bodney
“Send one plane it’s a sortie; send two planes it’s a flight; send four planes it’s a test of airpower. - Richard Kohn
Author unknown- 352nd Fighter Group, Blue-Nosed Bastards of Bodney
“Send one plane it’s a sortie; send two planes it’s a flight; send four planes it’s a test of airpower. - Richard Kohn
Re: Eduard 1/48 Hawker Tempest II
Thanks Tom! Appreciate the kind words! Hey, you're no slouch yourself! Honestly, I think the cockpit details here are a little "heavy-handed" but I think that is residual from my 1/32 scale builds. It's hard to adjust the detail level to this scale because everything is so much smaller. But I'm just going to roll with it as I consider this just a warm-up build.
The fuselage halves have been fused together with the engine, cockpit, and tail wheel well sandwiched in between. As always, I use Tamiya Extra Thin.
Checking the nose cowling ring and seems to be an excellent fit. View into the engine from the front is minimal even without the prop.
I picked up a set of Barracuda resin wheels because I saw one photo of an Indian Tempest with the block treads. Had a little trouble drilling out the axle hole square so I assembled the kit wheels as a back-up.
I still need to paint and install the top deck onto the fuselage. The gun sight is attached to the front part of this deck. I added a reflector glass and sun shade. Not completely accurate but adds a little complexity to the overly simplistic kit part.
The fuselage joint is pretty good but still need some minor filling. I used black CA glue for the initial leveling and then topped it off with Mr Surfacer 1000 to feather everything down. Still working on re-establishing the panel lines and rivets across the joints.
The small square fuel in front of the windscreen was eradicated by the fill work so I had to re-scribe it.
The vent grill on top of the fuselage has a PE option.
After test-fitting both, I elected to glue the PE grill on top of the kit part using thin CA glue and then gluing the kit part into the recess.
Fuselage work isn't finished yet but I got impatient and took a look at the wings. I immediately cut the fragile pitot tube from its base. It will be replaced with brass tubing.
To further complicate this warm-up build, I'm going to throw in these composite resin/PE flaps by Eduard.
The fuselage halves have been fused together with the engine, cockpit, and tail wheel well sandwiched in between. As always, I use Tamiya Extra Thin.
Checking the nose cowling ring and seems to be an excellent fit. View into the engine from the front is minimal even without the prop.
I picked up a set of Barracuda resin wheels because I saw one photo of an Indian Tempest with the block treads. Had a little trouble drilling out the axle hole square so I assembled the kit wheels as a back-up.
I still need to paint and install the top deck onto the fuselage. The gun sight is attached to the front part of this deck. I added a reflector glass and sun shade. Not completely accurate but adds a little complexity to the overly simplistic kit part.
The fuselage joint is pretty good but still need some minor filling. I used black CA glue for the initial leveling and then topped it off with Mr Surfacer 1000 to feather everything down. Still working on re-establishing the panel lines and rivets across the joints.
The small square fuel in front of the windscreen was eradicated by the fill work so I had to re-scribe it.
The vent grill on top of the fuselage has a PE option.
After test-fitting both, I elected to glue the PE grill on top of the kit part using thin CA glue and then gluing the kit part into the recess.
Fuselage work isn't finished yet but I got impatient and took a look at the wings. I immediately cut the fragile pitot tube from its base. It will be replaced with brass tubing.
To further complicate this warm-up build, I'm going to throw in these composite resin/PE flaps by Eduard.
John aka JKim
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Re: Eduard 1/48 Hawker Tempest II
First when I saw this I thought John's account got hacked. But then I noticed the quality of work and I calmed down.
At least a bit, since your skills are breathtaking also in quarterscale.
At least a bit, since your skills are breathtaking also in quarterscale.
When the sun of culture hangs low even dwarfs throw shadows.
Re: Eduard 1/48 Hawker Tempest II
Excellent work John - loving how this is coming together.
Gluing the PE grill onto the kit part was a good idea - that worked really well.
Gluing the PE grill onto the kit part was a good idea - that worked really well.
Stuart Templeton 'I may not be good but I'm slow...'
My blog: https://stuartsscalemodels.blogspot.com/
My blog: https://stuartsscalemodels.blogspot.com/
Re: Eduard 1/48 Hawker Tempest II
Great looking progress! Fun to watch.
To make each build less crappy than the last one. Or, put another way, "Better than the last one, not as good as the next one!"..
- Stikpusher
- Moderator
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Re: Eduard 1/48 Hawker Tempest II
That’s starting to take form now… very nice! Plus you gave me an idea for alignment on using my rivet tool when replacing lost detail…
"Surely I have made my meaning plain? I intend to avenge myself upon you, Admiral. I have deprived your ship of power, and when I swing 'round, I intend to deprive you of your life."
FLSM
FLSM
Re: Eduard 1/48 Hawker Tempest II
Thanks guys!
Here is the bottom wing after surgery.
The flaps were removed with a razor saw. A thin raised portion along the trailing edge of the wing tops also needed to be shaved down to accept the PE flap enclosures.
Here are the PE flap enclosure parts. Two versions are given for the outer flaps: gun cover on and off.
The reverse side of the outer parts have a recessed portion. The instructions don't mention this but I think this is meant to be burnished to create an extruded shape on the other side. Since I had a spare (gun cover off), I tried but it distorted the part. Instead, I am going to added these raised portions using sheet styrene.
A photoetch folding tool is essential for getting uniform bends. I like The Bug from The Small Shop.
The folded bits are test fit onto the aircraft
The top deck has been glued onto the fuselage. I took a lot of care to make sure the edges of the deck were flush with the fuselage but it turns out that the front portion needs to be slightly recessed to accommodate the windscreen. Luckily, I was able to push the front edge down after the fact.
The front engine cowling has been attached using Tamiya Extra Thin.
A preview of the prop spinner attached to the business end of the Tempest II.
Here is the bottom wing after surgery.
The flaps were removed with a razor saw. A thin raised portion along the trailing edge of the wing tops also needed to be shaved down to accept the PE flap enclosures.
Here are the PE flap enclosure parts. Two versions are given for the outer flaps: gun cover on and off.
The reverse side of the outer parts have a recessed portion. The instructions don't mention this but I think this is meant to be burnished to create an extruded shape on the other side. Since I had a spare (gun cover off), I tried but it distorted the part. Instead, I am going to added these raised portions using sheet styrene.
A photoetch folding tool is essential for getting uniform bends. I like The Bug from The Small Shop.
The folded bits are test fit onto the aircraft
The top deck has been glued onto the fuselage. I took a lot of care to make sure the edges of the deck were flush with the fuselage but it turns out that the front portion needs to be slightly recessed to accommodate the windscreen. Luckily, I was able to push the front edge down after the fact.
The front engine cowling has been attached using Tamiya Extra Thin.
A preview of the prop spinner attached to the business end of the Tempest II.
John aka JKim
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Re: Eduard 1/48 Hawker Tempest II
Here's a test fit of the clear parts. Looks A-Ok except the sliding canopy doesn't always want to sit flush on the fuselage. May have to resort to glue in either the open or closed position... we'll see!
Jumping over to the underwing rockets. I picked up a set of the Eduard Brassin rocket replacements because the fins on the kit rockets were thick and I didn't want to shave down four fins for each of the eight rockets (4x8=32!). I thought it would be savings in labor but boy was I wrong! The Brassin rockets need assembly and assembly involves a bunch of tiny photoetch parts.
Each rocket needs SIX tiny brass parts that need to be individually folded and glued into place without any clear key marks or holes to align things.
After you've negotiated that set of hurdles eight times, you have to glue the rockets onto each rail with a butt join. A small flat area on the little PE part butts up against the sharp edge of the rail, again without any key marks or cutouts for alignment. Like this... >I
If I was really motivated, I would dive in and try to get this done but I'm going to wave the white flag this time. An added complication is that the resin parts, both the rails and rockets, are not dead straight. Being skinny and long resin pieces, they are bit wobbly and that's just going to make a hard task even harder. I folded up a couple of the little parts during my assessment and stumbled onto an idea. Instead of putting the entire Brassin set to waste, I may be able to incorporate the brass parts onto the kit parts. Maybe even saw off the resin fins and glue them onto the kit rockets?
Jumping over to the underwing rockets. I picked up a set of the Eduard Brassin rocket replacements because the fins on the kit rockets were thick and I didn't want to shave down four fins for each of the eight rockets (4x8=32!). I thought it would be savings in labor but boy was I wrong! The Brassin rockets need assembly and assembly involves a bunch of tiny photoetch parts.
Each rocket needs SIX tiny brass parts that need to be individually folded and glued into place without any clear key marks or holes to align things.
After you've negotiated that set of hurdles eight times, you have to glue the rockets onto each rail with a butt join. A small flat area on the little PE part butts up against the sharp edge of the rail, again without any key marks or cutouts for alignment. Like this... >I
If I was really motivated, I would dive in and try to get this done but I'm going to wave the white flag this time. An added complication is that the resin parts, both the rails and rockets, are not dead straight. Being skinny and long resin pieces, they are bit wobbly and that's just going to make a hard task even harder. I folded up a couple of the little parts during my assessment and stumbled onto an idea. Instead of putting the entire Brassin set to waste, I may be able to incorporate the brass parts onto the kit parts. Maybe even saw off the resin fins and glue them onto the kit rockets?
John aka JKim
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- tempestjohnny
- Elite Member
- Posts: 3401
- Joined: Sat Oct 15, 2016 4:51 am
- Location: Naples. FL
Re: Eduard 1/48 Hawker Tempest II
I like the idea of combining the two.
Re: Eduard 1/48 Hawker Tempest II
God life's waaaayy too short for that - your combination of the AM and kit parts seems the best solution.
Stuart Templeton 'I may not be good but I'm slow...'
My blog: https://stuartsscalemodels.blogspot.com/
My blog: https://stuartsscalemodels.blogspot.com/