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The 1/32nd scale A-10 from Trumpeter (a
relatively new Chinese manufacturer) comes in such a large well packed box
that no modeller can fail to be impressed by it with metal and resin parts,
crystal clear canopy and windshield etc. etc. On closer inspection things are
not all they seem to be, it seems Trumpeter could not make up their mind as to
which version to build. There are three basic versions of the A-10, an early
production one, a later version with the LASTE fit (recognise these with the
formation light strips), and even later version with the GSP dome mounted on
top of the fuselage.
| The kit comes with a bit of each on board so you will
have to make up your mind early on which markings you will want and adjust the
kit accordingly. If you want an early basic machine then you will need to
remove the LASTE sensors from the outsides of the fins. Then you will have to
remove the GSP dome and fill the resultant holes. |
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| If you want the LASTE fit version then you will need to add the Light
strips on the fins, wing tips, top of the fuselage and two below the tail plus
add the rest of the sensors under the tailplanes and again remove the dome but
retain it if you want the very latest version. It will all depend on your
markings but remember the LASTE fit came after the Gulf war, so don’t be
tempted. |
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The kit can be built up straight from the
box into a nice looking model but it will not be very accurate and this shows
at this scale. The kit markings are for
two lizard scheme aircraft but I wanted a ghost grey scheme that was painted
on the RAF Bentwaters aircraft when they went in to have the LASTE upgrades
fitted.
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I had the Cutting Edge super detail sets in for
review and so I have incorporated these into this review.
The cockpit set CEC32057 has a new well-detailed
bathtub, instrument panel and coaming, stick, HUD frames and a beautifull ACES
II seat that is the best I have seen from anyone. There are some
interior
frames for the canopy and a correct operating system to open it
with.
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The exterior set CEC32061 has replacement exhausts, all
the LASTE sensors, refuelling point and door, replacement chaff dispensers for
the sponsons etc., various apu exhausts and intakes for the rear of the
fuselage, a number of antennas plus a new, more realistic, cannon muzzle with
lightning holes and separate barrels. There are some other small items (43 in
all), which are all explained on the instruction sheet that comes with the
set.
Construction
notes. My starting point was
with the rear fuselage halves where I drilled out the hole to take the APU
exhaust, make it a tight fit, just enough to let the resin part slide through,
make it flush with the outer skin and run a bead of superglue around the
inside edge. Note the positions of the other items and drill the appropriate
size hole then repeat the procedure with the remaining parts. The rear halves
were now cemented and left to harden before cutting out the centreline vent on
the underside and cementing in the replacement resin part.
The fit of some parts is not good, there are quite
a few gaps to fill but worst of all are the mating surfaces themselves, most
have tiny blobs of plastic which stop the two surfaces actually touching and I
found I had to clean up nearly all the edges before attempting to glue
them.
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The gun is a little masterpiece with
separate barrels, breach and ammo drum, it is a shame you don’t see it when
the fuselage halves are closed up. You need to put 80gms of ballast in the
drum or you will have a tail sitter but there is a clear plastic prop provided
on the canopy sprue, if you are using the replacement resin set then you can
make the whole gun up as a separate display but don’t forget the
ballast. |
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The kit cockpit is, to say the
least, basic although the seat isn’t bad but you will need to add some belts,
and the stick is beyond belief so I used the resin
set.
The pour block on the base of the bathtub will
need cutting away slightly to allow the wheel bay to seat properly but not too
much as you need all the weight you can get up front. You have a choice when
making up the instrument panel, you can sandwich a clear film between two
resin sections or you can just use the main panel and paint and highlight the
instrument faces, which I did. Now tape the
front halves together and, using the template supplied, cut out the coaming
ready to take the new corrected resin part, get a snug fit by cutting a little
at a time.
| The new
cockpit comes with the rear turtle deck moulded as one, this ensures
perfect alignment and ease of fixing when the whole is mounted in the
fuselage and the halves cemented. Don't just glue it to one side and
leave it for it is bound to be at the wrong angle (murphy's law) get
the other half in position quickly before the cement hardens and leave
to harden, my next step was when this assembly had hardened,
the hole for the gun muzzle was reemered out with a round Arbrafile until the
new resin part was a tight fit.
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This is the time when you need to decide
if you want the GSP dome, if not cement a piece of scrap 15 thou plasticard
beneath the mounting hole ready to take filler later. Fit the wheel bay and
join the two halves of the fuselage, allow to harden and add filler where
needed, (I flooded the join with liquid poly and waited a few seconds then
squeezed the halves together and enough molten plastic oozed out to form its
own filler).
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| The kit provides you with resin engines, which look
very attractive in the box and is probably what has sold a number of the kits,
they are not really accurate and are encased in clear plastic “bubbles” for
want of a better word. The real engines have a short front outer shell and a
large exhaust cover so I suppose you could cut the plastic bubble into front
and rear sections as a compromise if you wanted to use the operating engine
doors in the open position.
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The wings have separate flaps, which slide in or out
so make up all the flaps (the port inners are numbered 3&5 not 4&6)
and fill the joins on the lower surfaces. Whilst these harden off, clean up
the inner surfaces of the wing tip joins or they will not seat properly (you
will still need filler later), then clear out the hinge recesses for the speed
brakes and generally tidy the area up including the hinge pins on the brakes
them selves, this should make for smoother movements when fitted
in. Once you are happy with the flaps
add the runners one at a time with each flap, add the spars N3and N4 then the
lower wing halves. There is no positive
location for the inner rear edge of each wing and later I found I had to trim
some of the locating tabs down before the wings would fit the fuselage and
conform to the fairing shape even then I needed lots of filler on the
underside join. Carefully add the
control rod and mass balance to the speed brakes and gently push the hinge
pins home into the spars, I have left mine loose to show their potential but
remember these are not the ailerons, the drawings would have you believe the
aileron hinge line is further forward but in real life the line is closer to
the brake line and not quite where the kit has them inscribed.
| Next I cut the sponsons parts as directed and added
the front halves to the wing plenty of filler was needed here to get a good
joint with the wing (I just don’t know how some manufacturers think they can
get away with such a poor fit) then the resin replacements for the inadequate
chaff dispensers that are moulded on the parts were added, thank goodness the
Cutting Edge parts fitted nicely. |
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The
refuelling point on the kit part is not correct so the resin replacement was
used, once in place the joint was cleaned up but the door was not added to the
point until the whole model was finished as the hinges are so tiny.
Resin parts are supplied for the wing fences and
stall strip but I like to use plastic where I can so a new fence was traced
onto 15thou card and cut out while the stall strip was a piece of Plastruct A1
fineline angle. The sensors on the kit
tail fin were carefully removed and replaced with resin items, just remove
the sensor not its back plate.
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All the hinge mechanisms were tidied
up by scraping the mould join lines and glue joints before making up the
rudders and elevators and positioning them. Next the tailplane was added to
the fuselage and a bit of carving was needed before it sat neatly in its
recess, when that is made good, add the fins and check the alignment of the
whole unit as this is crucial. |
Adding
the wings is no picnic, some of the tabs in the end of the wing root need to
be cut down so the underside of the wing can conform to the fairing on the
fuselage, a “guestimate” is the best I can offer here, while the tops fitted
nicely the bottoms needed some persuasion to line up and even then there was a
large gap to fill. Again frequently check the alignment of the wings compared
with the tailplanes. Once all this was hard and tidied up the leading edge
slats were tried in position but the locating lugs were cast at the wrong
angle to be open, there should be a gap at the top and bottom so theses were
snipped off and new correctly angled pieces were cut from 40thou card and
added then mounted.
| The engine nacelles were dealt with
next, make your mind up time now, I wasn’t going to use the engines supplied
but I did use the resin exhaust parts, so parts J1, J2 and J3 were made up and
the exhausts, suitably painted with Hu polished steel, were inserted, next the
intake fans (very nicely detailed, you can see between each blade of the fan)
were painted up and built into the nacelle front part as supplied, although
they should be a bit deeper placed I decided to leave them as is. |
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| This unit
and the doors were now added to the main structure and checked that all was
lined up correctly after which the whole lump was cemented to the fuselage,
there was a slight gap at the front end which I “filled” with a strip of
30thou card which was then sanded to shape when hard. Although I never used
the resin engines I have seen them made up in a few models and they look very
good indeed, so the choice is yours. |
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built up the undercarriage legs, and some brake line plumbing was added before
spraying, these were then cemented in with superglue but no wheels or doors
were added until later, this makes handling easier when painting. |
| Now all the
antennas and air intakes etc can be added, as can the fuselage strakes and the
pave penny pod. If
you want the slime lights onboard then now is the time to mount the “bases”,
there is a strip of four sections up the fins, an inverted T set on the wing
tips, a single either side of the cockpit and a pair on top the fuselage right
behind the canopy in a V shape. Two strips of two are on the rear top fuselage
and a pair of singles below. |
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| I cut these out of 5thou card with measurements
to match whichever decal I am using, appx 1.5mm wider and longer than the
decal. Use cement sparingly when adding these or it will eat its way
through. |
Cutting Edge, supply a new HUD
frame work which just has to have the backing resin sanded away to give those
delicate side frames, you need to cut two “glass” parts from clear plasticard
and fix the between the frames with a drop of PVA glue before mounting I also
like to paint the small circle on the base silver so it will reflect a bit of
light. Adding the wind shield and all the pylons was the last job before
painting, no launch rails or steadies until later. Windshield and canopy were masked with Tamiya tape and the canopy
placed temporarily in position with PVA glue to mask the cockpit, the U/C legs
wrapped in kitchen foil, and two discs cut from an old photo were placed in
the intakes, with tissues around the exhausts. I used the two-tone greys camo
but won’t bore you with details. A couple of coats of Klear were sprayed on
before the decals were added.
I wanted a Bentwaters machine and
their markings are not available on sheets as yet so it was into the “decal
bank” for various codes, the rest came from one of the sets from Cutting Edge
Decals 32020 and 32021, I found the stars and bars on these sheets to be too
small so I spoke with Dave Klaus who tells me that he has printed replacement
sheets with the correct sizes and these will be sent out to all his customers
who bought from him, any reprint runs will be corrected. Cam Decals also make
some sheets for the A-10 in 1:32nd scale Another coat of Klear to protect everything and then a coat of
Revell No2 matt varnish was dusted over that to tone it all down to a nice
sheen. When all was unmasked the canopy
had the resin details added and the lifting mechanism was partially assembled
then hand painted matt black, keeping just below the outer grey colour line.
Various other details were added including some etched brass mirrors and
set-aside until last of all. There are
numerous stores to load under the wings and the instructions show four typical
war loads charts so you get them right, make up the weapons you require and
add them and the steadies at the same time to ensure correct
alignment.
| When I was happy with all the construction I added the final details
such as the resin bulged wheels and the canopy mechanism. The undercarriage
doors were added and the nav lights painted silver before adding a touch of
Tamiya clear red or green to each lens.
I think that covers every thing, my opinion? Well the obvious
problem is which version is it supposed to be! But once you have sorted that
out note that the detail is as good as it gets anywhere, some bits not totally
correct but nicely done all the same. |
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| Remember this is the only game in town
so we should thank Trumpeter for being so bold, or we would still be stuck
with some 1:48th scale kits which also aren’t terribly accurate, I feel sure
that they will only get better as time progresses |
Ted
To see more of Ted
Taylor's models....go to
Ted
Taylor's Modelworks
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