My kit-building for display has continued to proceed slowly and I've recently completed another two 1/72nd scale jets.
First up is this British Aerospace Hawk in Red Arrows colours by Revell.
This kit is a bit of pig. As well as the instructions being a bit vague in places, following them as written will lead to you gluing on half a dozen parts that make it impossible to then apply the decals!
At one stage I nearly binned it but in the end I decided to get it sufficiently finished to go into the display cabinet at least until I manage to build a better one. I may go for the Airfix version but not until I've had a chance to recover from this one!
Next we have the Armstrong Whitworth Seahawk from Airfix.
The Seahawk was much more enjoyable than the Hawk. If I found another one going cheap I'd certainly buy it with a view to making a Fleet Air Arm example.
4 comments:
Well worth the effort on the Revell kit there! I remember that Airfix used to deliberately include some misleading instructions for their kits to make kids think for themselves when assembling them. Nice work on the other kit too:).
Thanks Steve!
I'm not convinced about Airfix doing that deliberately; never ascribe to conspiracy that which can be explained by incompetence!
I'm tempted to do something silly for my next aircraft, like maybe a "what if" colour scheme. A Jet Provost with D-Day stripes? A Fleet Air Arm A-4 Skyhawk?
There were always rumours that in the 1980s the UK Government looked at reviving the TSR-2. How about one of them in grey/green camouflage or stealth black? Or an F-111 in RAF colours?
Cheers Andy! I'll have to be driven by what kits I can get hold of. I may get over to Hobbycraft tomorrow and see what they have.
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