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Squadron...SCRAMBLE! The 75th Anniversary Battle of Britain Diorama Options
jase
#61 Posted : 18 May 2015 13:51:01

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Loving the attention to detail, such a good build a joy to watch

jase
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davetwin
#62 Posted : 18 May 2015 15:28:30

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Another fantastic update and enjoyable read Robyn BigGrin

The Japanese produced the Type 5 Anti Aircraft gun which was based on captured Bofors
ModelMania
#63 Posted : 18 May 2015 21:15:32

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Another fabulous treatise on the art of micro scratch building Robin and a real treat for me to read as I love all of this extra home-made detailing, it's right up my street!! Drool Love ThumpUp

I think that's what is so appealing about scratch building don't you and it's so addictive? You can buy basic kits on ebay for mere pennies and with a bit of effort and planning, turn it into something that is the equal of a more expensive kit and have more fun doing it PLUS you get to learn a heck of a lot more about the subject matter by having to do more research as part of the improvement process? Win, Win every time as far as I'm concerned and for me it's what modelling is all about? I can't remember the last time I built something "out of the box"!! Huh Blink BigGrin

Looking forward to your next instalment Robin, your builds have long been among my favourites here on ModelSpace and I'm always watching them with keen interest - well done!! Cool ThumpUp

Love the dispersal hut by the way - excellent work my friend!!


Kev BigGrin
Nemesis
#64 Posted : 18 May 2015 21:34:34

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Stunning build, and the attention to detail is amazing, I take my hat off to you sir, total show stopper!!!Drool Love BigGrin BigGrin
Plymouth57
#65 Posted : 25 May 2015 18:23:56

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Many thanks as always to Stevie, Jase, Dave, Kev and Nem! Blushing Thanks too to Dave for that info, I thought the IJN had something similar, I suspected that, being the IJN they'd simply built their own Bofors without bothering with niceties like actually acquiring a licence!BigGrin
You're dead right Kev, I find the greatest enjoyment in modelling is improving the stock kit you've just bought by adding in as much as will fit! Not only do you end up with a vastly improved end result (if all goes well of course!), up to the standard of a much more expensive version, but the way it was up-graded makes it unique, not simply a mass produced 'clone'. Like you, if somebody gave me a kit to build for them, I'd still be itching to 'do things to it'!!Drool

Ok, if you can remember back to the Bedford Bowser, we'd just finished the chassis and cab part so here comes the 'business end'!Blink

Carrying on from the last Bedford instalment, with the chassis and cab complete, it was time to turn to the working part of the Bowser – the big fuel tank and it’s associated pumping gear.
The tank itself comes in three main parts, top, bottom and front. All the machinery for the pumping is situated in the rear and this section becomes very difficult to get at once the top and bottom are glued together, so all the up-grading in this area has to be done first. Photo 1 illustrates the tank bottom with all the kit parts for the machinery laid out in front. There are no extra parts being added, finding out just what the machinery in an early QL Bowser looked like has been really difficult, there are some photos around of late war versions but very little from the 1940 version. Since I haven’t a clue what all these bits are I left them all in and simply improved the pipe work instead.
The two cylinders on the right glue into the inside top of the tank and the moulded pipes are intended to glue on to the back of the two things that look like a key in a lock on the left. The pipes were cut off the cylinders and a hole drilled right through them before gluing them onto the upper tank. (More on them later).
In Photo 2 we have those two key thingeys, each of which has a corresponding hole drilled into their rear faces as shown here. Photo 3 shows all the above components glued into place, with the ‘bottle’ laying in the foreground. In the kit, the pipes coming out of this item are glued into the outlet above the squat thing with two ‘eyes’ with the longer pipe coming onto the curved support between the two drilled out keys.
In Photo 4 you can see the new and improved pipe-work, which is created from thick and thin electrical solder. Two thick lengths were super glued into those drilled out keys and the thinner solder replaced the cut off moulded pipe on the bottle. I should have a reel of the thicker solder somewhere but I couldn't find it, fortunately I found this solder in my tool kit from the 'Real Robots' part works. Photo 5 illustrates the whole lot put together and super glued in place. The thick solder wasn’t too bad, but boy, was that little bottle thing fiddly to get in place! Blink
Photo 6 is a quick return to those cylinders which had their pipes removed, here you can see them glued into the top portion of the tank with their centres drilled out to accept the thick lengths of solder.
In Photo 7, both the top and bottom sections have been spray primed with the Prodriver Grey Primer. Both halves had the rear of the body masked off and you might just make out where the locating ‘shelf’ which joins the two halves together has had the primer scraped off for the glue joint to follow. Photo 8 actually pre-dates Photo 7 (lack of primer grey!) and just illustrates how the thick solder comes up through the tanker body, whilst Photo 9 shows the pump machinery all painted up and ready for the two halves of the tank to come together. I originally painted the cylinder on the left red, but on reflection it made the back end of the bowser look too much like a fire engine so I went with a nice light blue instead. It’s actually Vallejo Grey Blue 70.943, the colour of the German infantry’s trousers in Messines! You can also see that I put in some simple bars and discs onto the rear end of the tank just to break up the flatness of it. The bars are styrene strip and the discs were sliced off the Spitfire’s sprue, which has a few of these sticking out of it. I later found out that the back of the tank is in fact – completely bare!Blushing
Unlike the kit however, it should be slightly convex not flat, it’s a sort of tank within a tank, the outer skin being the visible body on the QL chassis. With the tanker halves glued together and the front ‘cap’ also glued in place, the two protruding solder pipes were cut off level with the top surface and then gently pushed slightly down into the holes. This was to make room for the two top caps to be glued in as seen in Photo 10. They each have a stubby locating pin underneath which is why the solder has to be pushed in a little (and also why I painted the solder black right up to the end!)
With the basic tank and the internals done it was now time to up-grade the external components. In Photo 11, we have the kit pipes, which run along the top of the tank from the top caps seen earlier, to the ‘gantry’, which sits at the front of the tank. In between them are their replacements made out of 0.7mm brass rod, bent into the same shape as the plastic originals (eventually!) In Photo 12 I’m in the process of bending a short length of copper tubing in order to make the curved nozzles for a set of new ‘pumping booms’ which are a trademark of the Bedford QL. These allow the bowser to refuel two fighters at the same time or to reach the wing tanks on larger multi-engined bombers and transports. On the kit, both of the booms are moulded in the down or stowed position. I want to have one of them raised up over the ‘bonnet’ of a Spitfire as the ground crew hurry to remove the hose (“We’ll go with what we’ve got!”) remember that bit?BigGrin The bending ‘tool’ is simply a universal drill bit stuck into a convenient hole in my work top, I think I had a mini vice screwed in there once! The finished nozzles are seen in Photo 13, the bits in the background are a reminder that it wasn’t as easy as I thought it would be!Blushing
In Photo 14 we have the original kit part along with the first of the up-graded replacements. This one will be in the stowed position so all that was required was to cut off the plastic boom from the armature and replace it with a length of aluminium tubing cut to the same length. The plastic base was drilled out to take a thin length of brass rod which was super glued in place and this then went up inside the aluminium tube with a dollop of super glue to stick the tube in place. Another piece of rod was similarly used to fix the copper nozzle on the other end. The dotted yellow line indicates where this armature will be cut off the flat base and leads on to Photo 15 where the base of the boom has been cut away and the end of it sanded to form a flat before it is glued back on to the platform, this time at a raised angle. In Photo 16, the boom is in the process of gluing, with the end raised up on a block of wood (one of poor Victory’s cannon jigs!) In actual fact, since these photos were taken I’ve changed my mind and swapped the booms over so it’s now the left one which is raised! There were just a couple more details to add on before the priming stage, a set of four grab handles, two on each side of the tank which were made from a single strand of the electric wire (as used for the barbed wire in Messines). This was formed into the shape of the handle by bending around my smallest long nosed pliers and then squashed in a set of flat pliers as seen in Photo 17. These were then super glued into tiny holes drilled into the tank body. Finally, two sets of angled brackets made up from plasticard off cuts. The smaller one at the front end will support the fuel line on the stowed boom, (more solder to come there) whilst the larger ones at the back are where the ‘petrol pump nozzles’ are stowed.
Photos 18 to 20 show the finished tanker body prior to priming, (but before I added the brackets!) and the last two Photos 21 and 22 illustrate the finished vehicle in all its grey glory! The next time she appears here, she should be a nice shade of RAF blue!Cool
The next instalment will either be completing the pair of Spitfires or else adding some comforts of home to the Dispersal Hut, depends which one I finish first!Blink

Until then, Happy Modelling to you All!


Robin.
Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
Bedford Bowser Pt4 pic 1.JPG
Bedford Bowser Pt4 pic 2.JPG
Bedford Bowser Pt4 pic 3.JPG
Bedford Bowser Pt4 pic 4.JPG
Bedford Bowser Pt4 pic 5.JPG
First wooden ship: The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second: Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third: HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1
Nemesis
#66 Posted : 25 May 2015 23:16:47

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Does it start and run??!?!LOL BigGrin Stunning work as always!!Love Drool BigGrin BigGrin
Gandale
#67 Posted : 25 May 2015 23:44:40

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Always amazed at the level of detail you achieve and this is no different, fabulous piece of work once again....Drool

Regards

Alan
Plymouth57
#68 Posted : 27 May 2015 22:46:54

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Thanks so much to Alan and Nem, greatly appreciated!

I did try and start her up but something seems to be blocked up! I'm wondering now if I should have drilled out the centres of those solder pipes!!LOL
Not so much of an up-date tonight, it looks like the Spitfires will be winning the next instalment race though!
I've been working away on the little Morris Ambulance, thankfully not a great deal to improve on that one Cool but whilst I was fiddling around with it I had a sudden idea for a much (much much) smaller future diorama based on another classic British war film using the same Airfix kit. Can anyone guess which film I'm thinking about? Blink

Back soon.


Robin
Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
Guess the movie pic.JPG
First wooden ship: The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second: Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third: HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1
Gibbo
#69 Posted : 27 May 2015 23:36:08

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Stunningly detailed work as usual Robin, hope you're both well.
Regards
Paul
Building: DelPrado HMS Victory. Building: DeAgostini Sovereign Of The Seas.
ModelMania
#70 Posted : 27 May 2015 23:51:10

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Yet another fabulous update Robin, I find your writings are always very inspiring and I eagerly anticipate each and every one of them - very well done on bringing us yet another great modelling treatise!! Cool Cool ThumpUp

I believe the film you are thinking of for your next micro diorama is most definitely "Ice Cold in Alex"? A brilliant old film, watched it many times, and boy does that ice cold beer look refreshing at the end of it!!


Kev BigGrin
Plymouth57
#71 Posted : 03 June 2015 13:26:00

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Many thanks to Paul and Kev! We're both ok at the moment Paul though Mum is now two teeth lighter!Crying (It wasn't me, honest!!)BigGrin
Dead on there Kev!Cool Specifically the scene where the old ambulance is being ever so gradually taken up that huge sand dune by endlessly turning over the starting handle. The whole thing would fit into a diorama of just 6" square!Cool Cool

On with the 'biggie'!

The painting process commences in Photo 1 with the basic masking of the previously painted wheel wells. As I mentioned earlier, the kits can be made up in either undercarriage up or down versions, since mine are both ‘on the ground’ the best masking method to shield the wells is simply to stick in the surplus raised undercarriage parts as seen here!BigGrin The ‘plane on the right is ‘as is’ whilst the one on the left has got its extra strips of paper slotted down around the wheels for extra protection. With the U/C sorted out, the next task is to mask off the canopy and the cockpit interior. Again, as mentioned previously, the fit of the clear canopy is so good on this kit that it just ‘clicks’ into place without the need for any gluing, temporary or otherwise. Once in place, the entire canopy was given a good thick coat of Maskol, a purple liquid latex that dries to a transparent film which stops any paint but can be rubbed or pulled off afterwards. That just left the open cockpit doorway which, as you can see here is blocked in with an offcut of thin plywood – nothing fancy, I just kept sanding it down until it ‘just’ wedged in place. Photos 2 and 3 illustrates this, wet maskol above and dried film below. TIP! Paint the Maskol on with a damp brush – using a dry one means a really long rescue procedure to get the brush back afterwards. With a damp one, the latex simply washes out under the tap. (Yes, the voice of experience!)Blushing
Photos 4 and 5 shows Spit number one after the priming stage with a couple of coats of the Poundshop Prodriver Grey Primer spray. This is when you can really begin to appreciate that lovely sunken panel lining which covers this kit. I gave the primer a good twenty four hours to dry completely, even though it seems perfectly dry within minutes. The first of the ‘proper’ paints to go on was the Duck Egg Green undersides, now called simply “Sky” for some reason, or ‘Sky Blue’ if my translation of HimmelBlau is right. This is the Revell Aqua Color Sky Matt 59 which comes in those square tubs with the funny wind off lids. I thinned the (quite thick) paint down with 50 – 60% clean water for my first ever airbrushing of a model aircraft. Once I sorted out the controls on the airbrush it went quite well, I’ve always regarded airbrushing as more of an art than a science, the things never seem to operate the same way twice for me! After about four or so thin coats of paint the result was as seen in Photo 6. After another 24 hours I began to mask off the underside ready for the upper surfaces spray of Dark Earth. I used the excellent Frog Tape which is specifically designed for use with water based paints. This is the original version which I bought when it first came out, there is now a lower tack type for more ‘delicate’ surfaces but I haven’t tried that one myself. It was at this point that I realised what a mistake I’d made in gluing on the under wing pitot tubes. Needless to say, when the Frog Tape eventually came off, so did the tubes. Looks like they will be stretched sprue after all!Blink Photos 7 and 8 illustrates the masking procedure with a series of thin strips applied along the upper and lower demarcation lines and then joined together with wider panels until the whole ‘plane looks more like a 1920’s glider than the mighty Spitfire! Photo 9 shows the top surface now airbrushed with several coats of Revell Aqua Color Dark Earth 82, again thinned down by the same amount. In real life the brown isn’t as light as it appears here, I think the sunshine was coming in the skylight when I took that one!
Photo 10 doesn’t illustrate a sudden change of plans to a Desert Airforce diorama! I was surprised myself how the colour changed but this is simply the areas which will remain brown being painted over with the same purple Maskol. I had thought of doing the masking with Frog tape instead but got very frustrated trying to cut the camouflage shapes out and went for Maskol. I later wished I had used the tape as there was a little ‘leakage’ of the dark green onto areas where I’d made the Maskol layer a little too thin. Live and learn!Crying
You’ll notice the canopies have been cleaned of Maskol in these pics. According to the bottle it says not to leave the film on the model for more than three days. As the procedures were taking longer than that I removed and re-applied the latex a couple of times. I may be wrong, (which is why I didn’t risk it) but I think that three day limit only really applies to painted surfaces, I believe the clear plastic would have been fine left for much longer.
In Photo 11 we have the three stages of the last of the airbrushing. In the inset picture the Spitfire has been airbrushed with the Revell Aqua Color Dark Green 363, identical procedure as before with the colour built up with several thin layers. In the large photo the Spit on the right is as it appears after the Maskol has been rubbed and pulled off to reveal the Dark Earth sections below. Incidentally, those little paper tags I stuck on to the Maskol to help pull it off with were completely useless! I should have painted them on to the latex, not simply dipped their ends in the bottle and laid them on top. Each one of them just pulled away without bringing any of the film with them!Blushing
As you can see on this model, the Dark Earth is almost a dead matt whilst the Dark Green has a slight sheen to it. Until now, this is how I finished all my Airfix aeroplanes back in my youth, painted up (by brush back then) and then applied the decals straight on to the matt paint. This would be the first time I had ever done it ‘properly’. After reading many other diaries and watching many Youtube videos I’m giving the whole model(s) coats of gloss varnish before adding the decals and as you will see in the next instalment, what a difference it makes! I’ve been trying for weeks now to find a stockist of that Johnsons Pledge Multi Surface Wax. This stuff used to be known as Johnsons Klear and it is, in effect and very good quality acrylic gloss clear varnish which works out incredibly cheap compared to the modelling brand versions. You can get it on Ebay easily enough but trying to find it on a shelf in a Plymouth store is nigh on impossible! In the end I gave up and got a 125ml bottle of Humbrol Clear Gloss Varnish (acrylic). The Spitfire on the left has had about four or five coats of this stuff. I have to say though, I’ve done both Spitfires, the Bedford Bowser and the Morris Ambulance and that bottle has only gone down about half an inch. It’s as thin as water and can be airbrushed neat (as I believe, so can the Johnsons Pledge). Please note though, the bottles of Johnsons Pledge Multi Surface are NOT the same as the Johnsons Pledge Aerosol cans! That’s only for furniture!!
In the next instalment the decal markings are applied (and you’ll finally find out whose aircraft these are!), and some easy weathering effects are added on as well.

Until then, Happy Modelling to you all (and don’t touch that furniture polish!)BigGrin


Robin
Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
Painting the Spits pic 1.JPG
Painting the Spits pic 2.JPG
Painting the Spits pic 3.JPG
First wooden ship: The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second: Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third: HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1
Hans
#72 Posted : 03 June 2015 15:28:58

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Beautiful job there Robin, I will have to look more seriously at the spray painting side of things. Gives much better finish than a brush. Well done and thank you for another great tutorial.
Rgds, Hans
"It's okay to make mistakes. mistakes are our teachers - they help us to to learn, even if it is painfully"
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Plymouth57
#73 Posted : 03 June 2015 19:29:44

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Hi there Hans!
Thanks for looking in and for the kind comments!Blushing I'd really recommend trying out an airbrush for yourself (saying that, the one I'm using actually belongs to someone else!Blushing )
He bought a complete set from Ebay a couple of years ago when they were on special offer, two different airbrushes and a piston type air compressor for round the £50 mark! It does make a hell of a difference to the paint finish, far smoother than with a brush and the acrylics are touch dry within minutes.
The type I've been using is the Model BD-130A, I've seen one, brand new on Ebay (from Hong Kong) for £9.99. There are also WD and HD 130's on there as well which look identical, possibly different companies producing the same design under licence? In the UK the same model ranges from about £12 upwards. Most of them come with a screw on attachment to push the air hose on to, but my friend's had a different adapter with a 'push and click' air connector which was far better in use.
Best of luck and let us know how you get on if you try it!

Robin
First wooden ship: The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second: Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third: HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1
ModelMania
#74 Posted : 03 June 2015 22:56:15

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Hello Robin,

Nice work on the Spitfires my friend and nice to see that you are pushing your personal boundaries by trying techniques and products that you've never tried before, even if some of them don't work out as you would prefer - as you well know that is how we learn and eventually increase our skill set?!

A little tip for you when applying your decals. You may have noticed in the past that when you have applied the decals and they have dried, you have some 'watermarks' on the surface of the decals, which are hard to eradicate, a bit like the deposits on your car paintwork after raindrops have dried out? That is due to the hard water leaving slight scale deposits when it has evaporated? Use 'de-ionised' water (used to be called 'distilled' water back in the days of proper use of the English language!!) instead to soak your decals in before applying and you will get perfectly clean results. It's cheap enough not to be a burden on your wallet too!! Helps if you use it to thin your acrylic paints too and prevents that slight irregular blooming that you sometimes get especially with matt paints?

I knew it was "Ice Cold In Alex"!! Great film, will look forward to seeing your mini-diorama, though to be perfectly accurate you should take several attempts at getting the ambulance to balance on the gradient, as I do believe they wound it up the side of that sand dune with the starting handle more than once in the film, after it slipped their grasp and rolled all the way back down thus having to start all over again?!! Laugh LOL Blink Glare

Great stuff Robin, really enjoying your posts, this is proper 'old school' modelling and I love it - well done!! Cool ThumpUp


Kev BigGrin
Gandale
#75 Posted : 04 June 2015 00:33:47

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Fabulous work Robin, really impressive work once again....Drool Drool

Regards

Alan
Martyn Ingram
#76 Posted : 04 June 2015 14:02:42

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BigGrin All I can say is WOW lovely job Drool

Rgd Martyn
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Plymouth57
#77 Posted : 07 June 2015 22:08:44

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Thanks again to Kev, Alan and Martin! Have to admit I do enjoy the 'old school' approach although I've had a couple of experimental set backs in the last couple of weeks!Blushing (More details on that in the last part of the Spitfire instalment) The Bowser is now completed apart from the dangling hose which will go on when both the Spit and the Bowser are in their final positions. I'm really pleased with the way she's turned out (adding microscopic windscreen wipers was the final act!) and I'll put up some finished photos next week. That's a great tip about the distilled water Kev, I was trying to think why I'd never had problems with deposits and then I remembered the reason! Here in Plympton, we have the softest water in the entire country! Our catchment area is up on Dartmoor which drains into Burrator reservoir through pure granite - not a calcium bearing rock anywhere in sight. Down here, kettles wear out looking as clean as the day they were bought!BigGrin Mind you, airbrushing with water that doesn't contain fluoride is probably better for all concerned!Cool

On with the painting!Blink

In Photo 1 we have the ‘Sky’ airbrushed underside after the fourth or fifth coat of the Humbrol Acrylic Clear Gloss Varnish, (the same point at which we left the first Spitfire in the last instalment). As you can see by the nose, you certainly get a gloss finish with this product! I did notice though that the finish depends very much on the paint being varnished, whereas the Sky, which was the most matt of the three camouflage colours readily turned a good gloss after just a couple of coats, the Dark Earth took more coats and the Dark Green the most of all to achieve similar finishes. The Varnish Youtube video put on there by Humbrol themselves describes the varnish as ‘Self Levelling’ which means basically, however many coats you put on, any inscribed panel lines or other details shouldn’t be obscured or filled in. After five coats the panels were still nice and deep for the following stages as you’ll see, so it seems to work well. Photo 2 illustrates the first stage of improving the basic colour scheme using another new-ish Humbrol product; The Humbrol Enamel Wash range. I used the Black Wash for the upper surfaces in the Green and brown areas but for the Sky under surfaces I got a bottle of the Blue Grey Wash which wouldn’t be quite so harsh on this lighter background. (Sorry about the slightly off focus on this one!) The dark ‘blobs’ you can see dotted all over the panels are where I touched a very fine nylon paintbrush loaded up with the wash against the panel line. Because of the gloss finish, the wash acts like an ink and ‘wicks’ itself along the panel by capillary action. Each application will run for so far along the lines and when it stops, that’s when you add another brush full, hence the ‘blobs’. Each of the round whatsits along the leading edge received its share, as did the individual panels and other bits and pieces. Once completed, I then left the model overnight to dry completely, (I also did the top and bottom sections on different days too.)
The following day it was time to remove the excess wash with the help of a cotton bud lightly dipped in white spirit and then almost dried off in a paper towel (all right, it was toilet paper! My attic workroom is right above the bathroom!) As you can see in Photo 3, the difference is quite dramatic, the dampened cotton bud wipes away all the splotches leaving beautiful panel lines cleanly marked out.
It was now getting time to apply the decals, the other reason for the gloss finish of course. I can now reveal that the two Spitfires are not authentic Battle of Britain aircraft, but in keeping with the theme, they are in fact authentic Battle of Britain MOVIE aircraft! These two will become AI-A and AI-H the mounts of Squadron Leader Skipper (“Where the Hell are you Simon!”) and Simon the new ‘replacement’ Flying Officer respectively. If you know the movie well think of the “You can teach Monkeys to fly better than that!” and “From Spring Chicken to badehawk in one easy lesson….Dakka dakka dakka!) Now unlike the Airfix kit, in the movie the MkI’s were all sporting underwing roundels so I was going to need four of them. In Photo 4 we have one of my rescue-ees from the old garage workroom, my box of assorted water slide decals. Despite decades of damp winters and the unfortunate attention of furry visitors, the majority of the decals seem to be still in a usable condition (which really surprised me!) There are many spares and unused decals from my old kits of long ago but also dozens of completely ‘new’ sheets from models I’ve never had – these I bought many years ago, I think it was an ad in the Military Modelling magazine for a batch of fifty sets of assorted decals for very little money. By co-incidence, that sheet at the front with ‘PX’ on it went on to provide the red white and blue fin stripes which were also different to the kit markings.
In Photo 5, the underwing roundels are going on. I’m using my years old bottles of Humbrol Decal Cote 1 and 2 to aid the decals. This has now been superceded by a new Humbrol Decal Fix I think it’s called, again the Youtube video looked very impressive and I’d like to try that one, one day. The roundels came from a set for a Fairey Gannet. The only Gannet kit I can remember from back then was the old Frog kit so it’s probably from that one! The fuselage and upper wing roundels came from the Airfix decals whilst the actual aircraft letters AI-A and H came from a new set of Xtradecal RAF Sky Code Letters (in 18”, 24” and 30”). This is where I’ve altered from the movie though. In the Battle of Britain the actual letters would have been either a light grey or the Sky colour of the underside, in the movie the lettering is white. I decided to go with the more authentic colour here but to keep the movie’s markings. Putting on the decals was far easier on that gloss surface than the old ‘straight onto the matt’ and as you’ll see later, there was no ‘silvering’ around the decals at all, once the matt varnish was applied the markings really did look almost ‘painted on’. (Silvering is the term used when air leaks in under the edges of a decal causing it to lift slightly and become fogged or silvery). This almost always happens after a while if applied on matt surfaces. Once the decals were completely dried on, they were coated over with yet another application of gloss varnish to tie everything in together. You’ll notice on Skipper’s Spitfire there’s a small rectangular marking just in front of the forward canopy. This is the Squadron Leader insignia and should, to be accurate to the film be on both sides. I managed to find a single example in the decal sheets, which came from a kit of a Spitfire with a V1 Flying Bomb. A little researching revealed that this model was also a Frog kit from back in the 1960’s, that being the case, that little decal could be over fifty years old (and still went on ok!)Cool
Photos 6 and 7 illustrates the construction, and application of the doped red paper patches which were placed over the Browning muzzles during servicing. These patches effectively seal off the barrels of the guns, preventing moisture from rain or clouds from entering the gun mechanism. When in combat the guns simply fire through the patches, you can often see them fluttering about as the guns fire in old wartime news footage! I cut a strip off my sheet of clear inkjet decal paper and just painted it red using some old Humbrol Red Enamel (I scraped up the pigment sediment with a cocktail stick and brushed that straight on). The resulting red strip was then cut into individual lengths, dipped in the water and applied to the gun muzzle ports as seen in Photo 7. Simon’s guns were left covered over to represent his ‘newbie’ status whilst Skipper’s were poked through with a sewing needle to show his plane had been in action already that day. Photos 8 and 9 show the production of the individual aircraft registration numbers using the clear decal sheet again together with a very old sheet of Letraset rub down transfers. Unfortunately, the sheets with sufficient numbers on them must have dried out over the years as they just wouldn’t come off the carrier sheet, so I was forced to improvise! Three little nicks with a sharp modelling knife and a surplus 8 becomes a required 3! In Photo 9 the decals are ready to be trimmed and ‘dunked’. I should have really given them a coat of varnish but I put them on without and luckily got away with it. Small items like this you can do without a varnish coat, but I wouldn’t like to risk it with a large transfer.
Photo 10 shows the difference between the gloss coated Skipper’s Spitfire and Simon’s which here has had the final top coat of matt varnish. A really top quality matt varnish, which various sources have recommended, is an artists product by Windsor and Newton, namely their Acrylic Matt UV Varnish. This, as the name suggests, will also protect the model against the effects of sunlight. This can be diluted 50/50 with water and airbrushed straight on for a dead matt finish. I tried everywhere down here to get that stuff, eventually ending up at Hobbycraft who, despite the internet ad didn’t have any. Beginning to panic that I wouldn’t be able to get a good matt finish I decided to try my ten year old (or more) bottle of Humbrol Acrylic Matt varnish. I’d always brushed this on before and had found it very difficult to avoid brush marks in the finish. This time I tried diluting it 50/50 with water and tried it in the airbrush. After some experimentation I diluted it a little more, probably about 60% water and it worked perfectly! Mind you, the airbrush needed to be cleaned out quite smartish afterwards and I sprayed some water based brush cleaner through for good measure but the finish was excellent as you can see on AI-H. A lovely ‘almost’ dead matt with all the panel lines and details kept well defined. Once the varnish was dry AI-H received her reflector gun sight, a tiny piece of acetate, PVA’d into place (arrowed) as shown in Photo 11.
Now Simon’s AI-H, being a new replacement is in pretty much a factory fresh finish, Skipper’s AI-A on the other hand has already been through the thick of it and so will need a little ‘weathering’. This will consist of various stains emanating from the radiators and some carbon burning from the gun ports and case ejection slots. There are many sources of weathering powders on the market, I used an excellent pack of mud powders on the Messines diorama (and there will be some more subtle dusty mud effects using those same powders on the tanker and ambulance shortly) but for the black effects on the aircraft I decided to try and make some of my own. The very simple procedure is shown in Photo 12. From my artistic days I found a box of various soft pastel sticks. These are available for a few pence each from many art stores (if I hadn’t found these I noticed some replacements in the Hobbycraft store), they are basically a form of very dense chalk-like material which can be used like a pencil and smudged like charcoal. What I did was just to sand off the end using plain sandpaper glued onto a lollipop stick (you don’t need to do that though, it was already on the stick for other purposes), sanding the pastel produces a fine dust which is very similar to the commercial weathering powders, probably not so fine but perfectly ok for this. The powder was dabbed up on the end of a cotton bud as seen here and gently rubbed over the wings and underside where the staining was required as shown in Photos 13 to 15. The trick is not to over do it, although if you watch the Spitfires in the movie most of them are almost completely black under the wing roots and fuselage!Blink
Photos 16 and 17 illustrates the kit exhausts, since they’ve magically appeared on the aircraft along with the undercarriage, I better give them a mention! When I do the finished photos you’ll see them better but there are two things to watch out for when removing them from the sprue. Firstly, be very careful cutting them off, although they look quite thick here, the joints between the three sections is very thin indeed. I didn’t break mine fortunately but they will bend and snap apart if you are too heavy handed. Secondly, watch out for any flash – because most of what looks like flash actually isn’t! There will be a little flash at the front and rear where the sprue was cut off but the real exhausts do have a joint line running through the middle and there is also a semicircular raised line on the forward two sections (that little ‘knobbly’ bit in the first photo). The only improvement I put in was to carefully drill out the ends of the exhaust ports as seen in the second photo, starting with a miniscule 0.3mm bit and working up in stages to the biggest size that would go in without distorting the nozzle. The finished exhausts were painted with a mix of Vallejo Red Leather and Admiralty Copper, the Admiralty paint giving the exhaust a subtle metallic finish. They were then washed with [b]Citadel Shadow Black ink
to accentuate the raised lines and painted the nozzles in black. The final photo shows one of the undercarriage legs and wheel. As you can see, there is a brass rod protruding out of the end of the leg. This is the wheel assembly that I put just a little too much weight on when I was drilling out the tyre for another brass rod to fit into (I forgot to drill them before sticking them on!Blushing ), still, a hole drilled in the broken leg still in the wheel well and all went back together again! What I didn't add was exhaust burns to the fuselage sides. Apparently, the later Merlins with more exhaust ports closer to the airframe did produce those characteristic burns, but the early three-port Merlins stuck out further and didn't!Flapper
In the next instalment, another ‘start to finish’ mini build as the Morris Ambulance makes her debut (apart from that movie question!)BigGrin

Happy Modelling to you all ‘till then.


Robin



Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
Painting the Spits pic 4.JPG
Painting the Spits pic 5.JPG
Painting the Spits pic 6.JPG
Painting the Spits pic 7.JPG
First wooden ship: The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second: Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third: HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1
Martyn Ingram
#78 Posted : 07 June 2015 22:30:20

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BigGrin Stunning work Robin the weathering looks bril Cool

Rgd Martyn
Building ?
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davetwin
#79 Posted : 08 June 2015 00:22:14

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Once again a very thorough and enjoyable update Robin and thise Spitfires are looking awesome!
Plymouth57
#80 Posted : 14 June 2015 22:12:23

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Many thanks to Dave and Martyn for those kind words!Blushing
The Spitfires are virtually done now with only the aerial wires to add on (although Skipper's might require a hole in the wing where a ground crew will be standingCrying )!

Here's another 'Start to Finish' instalment with the Austin K2 Ambulance (and thank's for not picking up my silly mistake last week - Morris my foot!Blushing )



The Austin K2 Ambulance comes as one half of the old Airfix RAF Emergency Set. This was another one of my Ebay wins and like the Bofors, it appears to be an early edition. Unfortunately, that’s where the similarities end! It didn’t mention it in the auction description but this kit was not exactly as ‘pristine’ as I was expecting. For one thing the previous owner had actually begun to make the kit up, not very far I’ll grant you but some parts were already off the sprue and others, as I’ll explain shortly had old style polystyrene glue dried on. (It was fortunate that I wasn’t including the Fire Tender – the upper half of the water tank was very conspicuous by its total absence!) As, it turned out, so were the instructions (although I think there was a mention of that in the description, which is why it was cheaper than many other examples of this kit on there!)
Fortunately, there are various ways around that (which I checked before I bid on the kit!) and one of the best was www.vintage-airfix.com/instructions a site with many original instruction sheets available to download for free, not every Airfix kit by any means but many of them and well worth checking out if you’ve got an old Airfix without the instructions.
Photo 1 is my home printed copy of the Emergency Set sheet, as you can see, a fairly good quality copy although as you’ll read later, one indistinct part threw me a little towards the end of the build! Photo 2 shows the first two parts going together, A1 and A3. The floor of the bodywork was covered in a fairly thick layer of dried glue which convinced me in the end to model the ambulance with the back doors closed. I would have loved to stick a load of details in there and have the doors open but since the vehicle is going to be just parked up near the Dispersal Hut, having it ‘closed up’ would mean a lot less repair work on the interior so that’s the way it went.Flapper One of the trickiest parts is gluing the front mudguard section to the floor (which might be why the original owner gave up their attempt, if they were really young at the time I can fully understand why!) There is no actual locating peg or even a line to follow, you just have to apply the glue and hold the two parts together keeping them level by eye until the glue is set. In Photo 3 we have the now dry floor with the basic one piece frame of the chassis. This needed some careful de-flashing on some of the mould lines before it was glued to the underside of the floor. There was a very slight warping on this frame, probably just down to the age of the kit, but a couple of ratchet clamps ensured that everything was kept straight as seen in Photo 4. This kit really goes together quite rapidly once you get started and in Photo 5 the addition of the two side panels and the cab rear bulkhead begins to give the vehicle it’s characteristic boxey shape. One thing to note here though, this part of the construction is given in section 2 of the instructions. On the bulkhead you’ll notice a peg sticking out which is supposed to take the spare wheel which protrudes out the side into that curved extension. The spare wheel isn’t added until section 4, by which time you’ll discover that the wheel won’t fit into the curved bit as the peg is too long to get the wheel onto! I simply cut the peg down by half when the time came!Blink
Photo 6 illustrates a test fit of the cab front bulkhead onto which the bonnet is glued. Before that happens however, the cab controls need to be fitted in. Despite this being an earlier kit than the RAF Refuelling Set with the Bowser which had no controls at all, the Austin comes with both a gear stick and a hand brake which fit into corresponding holes in the cab floor, as seen in Photo 7. There are no foot pedals on this model and, unlike the Bowser, I haven’t tried to add them in as there just doesn’t appear to be any room on the cab floor to fit them. The only place where they might go is way to the left of the driver’s seat and would look really strange so in this instance I didn’t attempt an ‘up-grade’. The bonnet and side panels are shown ‘flat pack’ in Photo 8, ready to be glued in together with the radiator at the front. This is a little bit fiddly, again no locating points, just the curve of the sides which butt up to the angled ridges and flat channels for the bonnet. One thing I did do here was to cut off the moulded-on canvas doors from the front of the cab bulkhead, these will be replaced later with flattened lead sheet rolled up and tied as per the full sized original.
In Photo 9 we come to the main piece of scratch building for this model, just like the Bedford it’s a new replacement exhaust pipe and silencer. Apart from the overall improvement aspect, there was another good reason for replacing the kit part – the front of it was broken off and missing! There’s about a half-inch section missing which includes the curve to take the pipe up into the bottom of the moulded engine block. As with the Bedford, the pipe was 1.1mm styrene rod and the silencer was a length of aluminium tube. The four sets of suspension springs shown in Photo 10 needed a little sanding down, both for the usual flash and also because two of them had apparently been glued in before, judging by the dried on poly glue, a square section diamond dust file soon removed any residue, and after gluing the springs on to the chassis, the exhaust pipe and the drive shaft links were also put on as shown in Photo 11. The cab detail is shown in Photo 12 after the main assemblies had been sprayed in the usual Prodriver Poundshop Grey Primer, as can also be seen in Photos 13 to 15.
With the roof section removed again the first section to be airbrushed in Revell Dark Green acrylic was the cab interior shown in Photo 16. Unfortunately, I didn’t take any photos of the rest of the model turning dark green, but basically, that’s all the main painting there is, everything was airbrushed with multiple light coats until the whole model was sufficiently coated including the five wheel hubs which were airbrushed separately on cocktail sticks as you’ll see later. With the Dark Green complete, the whole model was given several coats of the Humbrol Acrylic Gloss Varnish and then some shadowing with the Humbrol Black Enamel Wash followed by a Dark Green and White mix for drybrushing the highlights. Now came another change to the basic kit. The decals provided include a series of red cross markings consisting of the red cross on a circular white background. Checking the movie again, (the ambulance only makes one brief appearance in the film after the bombing of Manston Airfield), the movie version doesn’t have circular signs, it has square ones! It was necessary therefore to create some new decals to replace the kit ones (which did appear a little on the ‘yellow’ side anyway!)Blink A couple of years ago when I was creating the decals for my HMS Victory I bought a couple of A4 sheets of inkjet decal paper, one clear and one white. I decided to make up the white backgrounds by cutting the shapes out of the white sheet. You’re supposed to laquer the surface of these sheets before dunking them in water but since I wasn’t inkjet printing anything on them I tried to use them without – big mistake! Although I eventually got the squares where I wanted them it was a very frustrating job, without a top coat of varnish the decal is both slippery and sticky on both sides! Trying to get it to stop rolling over on itself was a nightmare! Eventually I managed it successfully and was then able to create the red crosses by cutting off strips from the Roundel and Fin Stripe decal sheet shown in the last Spitfire instalment as shown in Photo 17. In Photos 18 and 19, all the red cross decals are in place and the whole model has been airbrushed in 50% thinned Humbrol Matt Acrylic Varnish (after all decals have been sealed with another coat of gloss varnish). At this point the roof is still removable.
With the roof off again it was time to finish off the cab interior by painting in the instruments on the dashboard as well as the tops of the gear stick and hand brake. The driver’s seat was then finished off in Revell Wood Brown 382 acrylic as too was the other front passenger cushion, and the spare wheel was finally glued into place (that’s when I discovered the peg problem!) With a little more ink washing and drybrushing plus finishing off the instruments with a drop of MicroSol Kristal Klear. The additions can be seen in Photo 20. The last task before the roof could be permanently glued down was to glaze out the windscreens as shown in Photo 21. These were far easier than the Bedford, all three were simple rectangles cut out of the same overhead projector film. No actual glue was required, the three panes were cut so they just fitted into the frame and then a soft brush of Humbrol Gloss Varnish was applied to the centre of each pane and carefully brushed to the edges where it spread itself by capillary action between the acetate and the frame sealing each section in place. It was at this stage that I noticed two things were missing from the model compared to my research photos of the real vehicles. Firstly, there was a frame mounted on the front bumper, presumably for towing or something similar and secondly, there were no rear lights at all. It was only then I realised that one of the ‘indistinct’ areas on the downloaded plans was actually that missing front frame!Blushing A quick search in the box and there it was, still attached to the sprue. After a little clean up and a quick coat of dark green the frame was safely in place. As for the rear lights, that was another scratch build exercise as shown in Photo 22. Just a strip of plasticard with three slices of 1.1mm styrene rod glued on to represent the red rear light, a red reflector in the middle and the turn indicator on the inside. I painted the panels up whilst still on the strip and then only needed to paint the cut edge after they had been attached to the rear chassis under the two doors. The final jobs were to make up the two canvas door rolls from DecraLed strip, rolled out to flatten it down a bit and then cut to size and rolled up before tying a single strand of wire around each one and painting them with Vallejo Khaki and super gluing them on at the front of the cab sides (Photo 23).
Finally the other four wheel hubs were glued on, each one being gloss varnished and weathered with Humbrol Black Enamel Wash as shown in Photo 24. As you can see from the Bowser cab in the background, this was actually done some time ago!
The final set of photos, Photo 25 to 29 shows the finished K2 after some subtle Carrs mud powder weathering posed on part of the airfield base. Now that the base and terrain is well underway I finally have somewhere to photograph the finished elements on! In conlusion, despite it’s great age, this little kit is still a well detailed and fairly easy one to build (apart from that early chassis bit!) and builds up into a lovely little model. If only they could have included a driver figure with his legs attached and maybe a sitting passenger/medic it would have been even better!

In the next instalment, beginning the Hawker Hurricane, and for those of us who love scratch building (Hi Kev!)BigGrin you’ll enjoy this one!

Happy Modelling ‘till then!


Robin
Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
The Austin K2 Ambulance pic 1.JPG
The Austin K2 Ambulance pic 2.JPG
The Austin K2 Ambulance pic 3.JPG
The Austin K2 Ambulance pic 4.JPG
The Austin K2 Ambulance pic 5.JPG
The Austin K2 Ambulance pic 6.JPG
First wooden ship: The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second: Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third: HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1
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