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Squadron...SCRAMBLE! The 75th Anniversary Battle of Britain Diorama Options
Martyn Ingram
#81 Posted : 15 June 2015 08:21:18

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BigGrin Stunning build as all ways Robin . Bril simply bril Drool

Rgd Martyn
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Plymouth57
#82 Posted : 22 June 2015 19:02:14

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Many thanks for those kind words again Martyn, greatly appreciated! Blushing

Another Battle of Britain Fact:When the Hawker Hurricane went into full production Hawker's were turning them out faster than the RAF could accept them into service. For that reason the Government gave Hawker's permission to sell the surplus on to friendly foreign air forces likely to resist the rise of the Nazis. After the Battle, as more and more squadrons re-equipped with Spitfires, hundreds of Hurricanes were supplied to the Soviet Union. Following the usual Soviet doctrine of belittling anything that was not built in Russia, Stalin's government described the Hurricane as mediocre at best and far below the quality of communist designs. One of the Soviet's top fighter Aces however described the 'plane as the best fighter he had ever flown!Flapper

And so the other ‘Saviour of the Nation’ finally makes her first appearance, the Hawker Hurricane MkI. The Hurricane was essentially the final configuration of the long pedigree of Hawker’s pre-war biplane designs which ended up with the Hawker Fury and Demon. The first design of the Hurricane, was equipped with a fixed undercarriage like the Stuka, (as was also the Spitfire in fact) and just four .303 machine guns, two in each wing, and the aircraft was to be powered by the Rolls Royce Goshawk engine. The Air Ministry was unimpressed however and rejected the design. The designer Sydney Camm went back to his drawing board (literally)BigGrin and re-designed the airframe to include a retractable undercarriage and a change to the new Rolls Royce PV-12 engine – never heard of it? Neither had I, but it went on to be immortalised under a new name – the Merlin! The new design was received with more enthusiasm and a prototype was ordered. During its construction a new specification was ordered by the RAF for all future fighters to be armed with not four but eight guns. The prototype was too far advanced to include the extra armament but still passed its first tests with a few design changes to be introduced including the eight guns. RAF trials began in 1936 and test pilots reported that: “The aircraft is simple and easy to fly with no apparent vices”. Further testing later did reveal a hidden flaw however when it came to spin recovery characteristics – the damned thing wouldn’t recover easily at all!Blink Having failed the spin tests Hawker helpfully suggested that those particular tests could be ignored! The RAF however had something to say about that (dizzy fighter pilots not being the most useful in a dog fight!) The Royal Aircraft Establishment discovered that the loss of spin control was caused by the airflow over the lower fuselage below the tailplanes and could be solved by the addition on a small ventral fairing and extending the rudder down to that fairing. That’s why very early Hurricanes have a flat rear end and subsequent builds have the ‘dipped’ fairing (except on my model as I’m cutting her a….. err, back end off!)
The first Hurricanes were, just like the earlier Hawker biplanes, entirely fabric covered, however, the doubling of the gun armament meant that the ground crew needed to kneel or lay over the wing to service the guns. In my model the wing had now acquired an aluminium section across the wing from the gun muzzles to the trailing edge. By 1939 though, a new wing of fully stressed aluminium was brought in and continued throughout the war. The Hurricanes actually shot down more enemy aircraft than the Spitfires, a fact that led to a form of snobbery amongst the very German aircrew they were downing, many of the captured enemy swore blind that they had been brought down by the more respected Spitfires!
Although the Hurricane was developed into various forms including Fighter-Bombers and the Fleet Air Arm Sea Hurricane, the basic design of wood and fabric was already at its pinnacle and unlike the Spitfire, which was a totally new fully metal design and went on to improve throughout the war, the Hurricane just couldn’t keep up with the new technologies. But who cares! She was ready and waiting just when we needed her the most!Cool
So, on to the kit. In Photo 1 you can see the entire kit contents laid out, four sprues of a nice light grey plastic with a fifth sprue in clear for the canopy parts and lights etc. The canopy itself is composed of three parts but only two are used, the main ‘greenhouse’ sliding part and a choice of two front windscreens, the earliest ‘flat’ version or the upgraded thicker one with the additional bullet proof panel. I’ve gone for the bullet proof version, partially because most of the Hurricanes in the Battle were retro fitted with them and also because the early version was unfortunately broken in my kit (snapped away at the sprue attachment). What I haven’t shown is the well drawn out instruction booklet composed of seven pages of A4 (not the single double sided sheet in the Spitfire!) Whereas the Spitfire kit was a ‘Beginner’s’ model, the Hurricane most definitely isn’t and there are some issues with the fit of parts as I’ll explain when we come to them. The first thing to notice is the construction of the cockpit, which is completely different to the Spits. Where I could build the Spitfire cockpit as a separate unit, super detailing it before, then adding the whole thing into the fuselage halves, with the Hurricane you can’t do that. The Bulkhead which holds the seat and the instrument panel locate into the left fuselage but the foot pedals and control column fit onto the cockpit floor which is part of the upper wing component. We’ll come to that later on, but the starting point (following the instructions at this point) is the lower wing half and the undercarriage wheel well. In Photo 2 we have the main components of this section laid out, there are some further details which go in after the fuselage is added and the u/c legs go in. Photo 3 illustrates those same parts in position ready for painting. I believe later marks of Hurricane had the same ‘cockpit green’ protective paint like the Spitfires but the Mk I’s were bare polished aluminium in most of the exposed metal areas. In order to paint these areas I found my old tin of Humbrol Polished Aluminium Metal Cote. I thought it was still in the old garage but after a long and fruitless search I discovered that I’d already brought the thing up on a previous salvage trip! As you can see in Photo 4, the tin is really rusty on top but the Metal Cote is as good as the day I bought it which, when you consider that that day was over thirty five years ago, is pretty good going!Blink (If only the acrylics would do that!) The composite Photo 5 shows the wheel well after painting with the Metal Cote from top and bottom. The only problem I’d overlooked with the Metal Cote was that, being spirit based itself, trying to use the Blue-Grey Enamel Wash to shadow the details tended to dissolve the aluminium! I should have coated it with the acrylic varnish first of course.
There was going to have to be a whole lot of scratch building on the Hurricane. My initial plan was to cut the fuselage through the middle to expose the innards of the airframe but the moulding of the model was so good I decided it would be a pity to spoil it and so the Hurri would go in intact. Unfortunately, when I started to fit in the various elements of the diorama; the two Spits, the hut, Bofors gun and the two vehicles it became apparent that no matter how I arranged them, it just looked too crowded for an operational airfield. The only way to get the space the model needed was to lose the back half of the poor old Hurricane – so back to Plan A it went. For the internals I again used one of my excellent volumes of The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft, a weekly part work from some time ago, each aircraft featured came with a highly detailed cut away diagram as you can see from the photo I took of the Hurricane pages in Photo 6. The only problem with that collection is that the full colour plans often show one model and the cut away drawing shows another. In the case of the Hurricane the full colour was a Battle of Britain MkI and the drawing was a MkII Sea Hurricane armed with flamin’ cannons which meant more research on the web to get the gun bay layout!Crying
Speaking of the gun bay, that was the next stage! In Photo 7 we have the finely moulded panel lines of the gun bay on the port wing. There seemed to be some re-designing going on in this area among the early Hurricanes, this one has the more rectangular panel but others, (possibly when the all metal wings were coming in) have a sort of rectangular with hexagonal bits instead. The first job was to carefully scribe along the panel lines with a sharp pointed knife as in Photo 8, repeatedly going slightly deeper each time until the entire panel was removed, shown in Photo 9. The wing halves are held together with masking tape as seen here, I had to keep putting it on and peeling it off as the various components of the gun bay were made up and test fitted (sometimes needing a little tweaking when I’d forgotten that the wing was getting thinner towards the tips as well as from front to back!) With the panel removed, it was necessary to file back the thickness of the upper wing at the edges of the now open bay to bring those edges back to something closer to the metal skin thickness. I could now start to plan out and construct the intricate aluminium spars and box girders, which make up the interior of the Hurricane’s wing. I began by first cutting and sanding offcuts of Plasticard to the shape and size of the spars and then drawing the zig-zag pattern of the internal struts. A copy of the template was then glued together out of 0.5 x 0.8mm Plastruct styrene strip (the same as I used on the Hut windows) as shown in Photos 10 and 11. Again, these were glued together on the sheet of glass so they could be carefully removed by safety razor blade once dry. The procedure carried on with frequent referrals to the cut away drawings until the main part of the bay was done as in Photo 12. The extra long bit is the Leading Wing Spar with the series of holes through which the Brownings barrels pass and the rear most section is the Main Wing Spar which carries right on to the wing tip and back to the fuselage where it is one of the main attachment points joining the wings to the fuselage. The last major piece was the next spar along which is almost hidden from view but does form the outer wall of the ammunition box stowage. This can be seen coming together in Photo 13. The finished bay can be seen in Photos 14 and 15, and after it’s Metal Cote in Photo 16. Once the bay was suitably weathered down (or grimed up whichever is closest!) I had to construct the Brownings. This is where the natural sneakiness of the modeller comes in. I have a couple of hard plastic ground crew figures carrying a Browning, they came with the RAF Refuelling set and I’ll be using one of them in this model. Not only did I use the gun he was carrying to get the dimensions from, but by having him carrying one of the things, I only needed to make up three more instead of four!BigGrin
Photos 17 and 18 illustrate the sequence in building the Browning .303. Starting with a strip of plasticard cut off one of my thicker sheets, first a ‘shelf’ is filed out of the top surface which will take the ‘wings’ which stick out slightly (part of the breech mechanism which is raised up when loading the gun). Once the shelf was correct, then the strip was cut to length, this saves having to get the shelf in the right place and also allows better handling with a longer strip to hold onto! A thin strip of plasticard was then cut and glued on to form the wings and the front was drilled out to accept a short length of 0.5mm black coated copper wire which forms the barrel. None of the barrels are actually seen once in position, I simply added them on as a guide to stick into the barrel blast tubes as you’ll see shortly. To finish off, a short piece of stretched sprue was added to the rear of the gun and an even thinner piece was drilled and glued into the left side to form the cocking bolt.
The last item to add to the bay before the guns could be fitted was the set of four blast tubes. These pass through the leading edge spar right up to the muzzles on the front of the wing. They were also fitted with a heating element, with another back in the gun bay itself to prevent the guns freezing up. The tubes were formed from 2mm diameter aluminium tube (no painting required here!) and were super glued into place lined up with the muzzles as shown in Photo 19. Photo 20 illustrates the final test fitting of the three machine guns and their four associated ammunition boxes, also made from thick plasticard. (There are also a complicated set of curved ramps which feed the ammo belts into each gun together with smaller ones to guide the spent cartridges out of the slots in the slower wing. I got away with making them though as they would be removed before servicing the guns!Flapper ) The strange looking thing in Photo 21 is a single strand of electric wire with four other strands knotted on and stuck in place just by the black acrylic paint. I did try super gluing the first attempt but in this minute scale the super glue made big ‘blobs’ at the knots, which didn’t look right. What this object turns into is the pneumatic tube assembly attached to the bolt mechanism, which actually fires the guns. This tube runs all the way back to the fuselage to a compressed air cylinder, another reason not to take a bullet in the air bottle - as well as the powered undercarriage, you’ve also lost your guns! In Photo 22 the guns, now painted satin black are in position with the pneumatic tubes attached apart from the dangling one for gun number two and finally, in Photo 23 the top wing is temporarily back in place to show the finished gun bay. Note those two little flat plates sticking up in front of the empty blast tube, those are two tiny pieces of lead strip and represent the two metal plates onto which the body of the Browning is bolted.
In the next instalment, onto the Hurricane's cockpit – and beyond!Blink

Until then, Happy Modelling to you All!


Robin
Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
Hurricane pic 1.JPG
Hurricane pic 2.JPG
Hurricane pic 3.JPG
Hurricane pic 4.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
#83 Posted : 22 June 2015 19:22:09

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Another fantastic update to your build!Love Drool BigGrin Think I might just pack the Leo away!!LOL LOL
Your attention to detail is superb as always and the scratch built cannons in the wings of the Hurricane are testament to that! Top top work.BigGrin BigGrin
davetwin
#84 Posted : 22 June 2015 23:26:39

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A fantastic write up as usual and very interesting as well. A lot of people often over look the Hurricane and favour the Spitfire. Your build really is going to be something quite special. I am enjoying this immensly! Cool

If I may make a suggestion, and I really hope it doesn't come across as being rude as that is not my intention at all, would it be possible to perhaps break your write ups down into a few paragrahs just to make it easier to read BigGrin I hope you dont mind me suggesting it
stevie_o
#85 Posted : 22 June 2015 23:49:00

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Gandale
#86 Posted : 23 June 2015 00:28:35

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Can only reaffirm what others are saying Robin, truly stunning work and have the firm belief this will be another of your outstanding dio's when finished.... Drool Love Drool Love . Top class work...

Regards

Alan
Martyn Ingram
#87 Posted : 23 June 2015 08:33:20

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BigGrin Wow stunning simply stunning this is one heck of a build Drool

Rgd Martyn
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Completed. Soliei Royal . Sovereign of the Seas . Virginia . Scotland . San Felipe . Corel vasa , Santisima Trinadad X section , Vasa
Next Build ?
When sailors have good wine, They think themselves in heaven for the time. John Baltharpe
ModelMania
#88 Posted : 23 June 2015 23:09:53

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Yet again another superb treatise on the art of scratch-building Robin and though some may find them a little long (which I fully understand) I thoroughly enjoy reading the content and look forward to each new post - though I appear to have missed a couple as I've not had much time to catch up recently because of other commitments and had zero modelling time myself?!

Love all that work on the guns and guns bays, particularly like the fact that you went to the trouble to add the pneumatic firing tubes and those wing ribs and spars look brilliant I must say. I am also a great fan of the old Humbrol 'MetalCote' and 'Rub'n'Buff' enamel paints, they are hard to beat and don't need all the 'prep' work that the modern Alclad paint systems require? They definitely still have a place in modern modelling in my opinion and I hope they never die out. I still have a few in my paintbox and use them regularly - though none of the tins are as rusty as yours!! Blink Huh Scared

So what next Robin? Will you be scratch-building the rear fuselage formers and stringers out of plastic strip and doping real fabric over it? Or maybe real doped fabric ailerons?

Great stuff mate, keep it up and I look forward to the next episode!! Cool ThumpUp


Kev BigGrin
Plymouth57
#89 Posted : 28 June 2015 20:51:25

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Many thanks indeed to Nem, Dave, Stevie, Alan, Martyn and Kev! Blushing
I know exactly what you mean Dave and it isn't rude at all!BigGrin I should apologise for the last instalment, even I didn't realise how long that one was until I posted it up! In retrospect I should have done the potted history of the Hurricane as a separate 'pre-instalment' which would have reduced the text by at least a quarter.
I must admit I'm like Kev, I love to read all the nitty gritty details of how other modellers did their work but I will try to 'condense' the input a little!Blushing The perfect solution from my point of view would be for the web site boffins to incorporate a way to post text and photos alternatively, that way, each photo would only need the text associated with it, not all the text followed by all the photos (I don't use photobucket which does seem to allow something similar)Cool

Anyway, here's a 'shorty' whilst I'm putting the Hurricane cockpit instalment together - a photo-shoot of the completed Bedford Bowser with another Film Fact.

Did you know... The sequences which were supposed to be an attack on Manston Airfield during which a hanger blows up were filmed at RAF Duxford, and that exploding hanger WASN'T a special effect - the hanger was a type called a "Belfast" which was erected during the First World War, Duxford wanted it removed and so the film producers paid to have it blown up during filming!Blink
Of course, with the Centenary of WW1 now well underway, that hanger would have been considered a priceless relic!Blink Blushing Crying
Oh well!

Here's the Bowser!
Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
Bedford Bowser Photos pic 1.JPG
Bedford Bowser Photos pic 2.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
davetwin
#90 Posted : 29 June 2015 23:04:58

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Lovely progress being made with this Robyn Cool

Please forgive me as I really do enjoy reading the information you are giving. I suppose its just I do most of my internet on a small 10" touch pad screen so the odd seperated paragraph makes it easier for me to read.

Please dont feel you need to condense it on my behalf Blushing
Plymouth57
#91 Posted : 30 June 2015 22:59:45

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No need to worry at all Dave! (and I'm glad you enjoy the info!!)BigGrin A 10" screen! No wonder you have to scroll a lot! I know what it felt like when my main computer became 'unavailable' due to an infection and I was using my diddy Toshiba notebook to keep the diary going (not to mention the 10" keypad!!)Crying Blink

OK then, here comes part one of the innards!Blink
Photo 1 shows the two basic halves of the Hurricane fuselage, like the Spitfires, the wings form the bottom of the centre fuselage but unlike them, there is also a separate rear fuselage floor – more on that piece later. As you can see, there are moulded instruments on each side wall, and in addition, some straight ‘bars’ as well. These are actually parts of the Hurricane’s aluminium frame and in the early versions like this one, were left bare polished metal – a whole lot more bare polished metal coming up soon! The rest of the cockpit area was the same ‘cockpit green’ as the Spitfires. You can also just make out the pencil lines where the fuselage will eventually be cut in half.Crying
Photo 2 illustrates the three other cockpit components: from top to bottom, the aluminium seat, the front instrument panel and the rear bulkhead, which holds the seat. Here the parts have been primed, note; on both the seat and bulkhead, the slots for the Sutton Harness have both been included in the mould! The instrument panel has been painted up and the instrument decal has been added in Photo 3 and the dials have each received a blob of Micro Kristal Klear to make them more ‘3D’. As I mentioned earlier, the Hurricane’s panel is completely flat so I didn’t need to cut out the central section. In a larger scale model however, that middle bit should have a gap all around it as, like the Spits, it is actually a separate piece with it’s own anti vibration mountings.
Photos 4 and 5 show the final assembly of the seat and bulkhead, the rear shoulder straps, again from lead strip have been added in 4 with the rest of the Harness completed in 5. Although it’s the same set of straps as in the Spits, the slot in the seat back is much higher up in the Hurricane and the waist belts attach directly to the underside of the seat as you can see here. In Photo 6, it’s back to the fuselage halves to begin constructing the main aluminium tube framework. For the most part this is made from the recently re-discovered Rico Styrene Rod. Although the full length rods do have a slight curve probably due to their decades of less than perfect ‘storage’, it’s not noticeable over these short lengths. The first pieces to be made however were the curved flat ribs (the vertical bits) these were made from my more modern Plastruct styrene strip, the very last of my 1.1mm strips from the Messines tanks. These are not solid however but drilled out with lightening holes along their lengths. I forgot to show them from the drilled sides here but I’ve popped the photo in a little later!Blushing The main tubular frame then runs between the ribs and back behind the seat bulkhead.
Photos 7 to 9 illustrates the two methods to create the wooden ‘Stringers’ which run across the outside of the metal frame. This is where the Hurricane regresses back to its Bi-plane heritage, the wooden stringers form the actual shape of the fuselage over which the doped fabric is run to create the outer skin. It also meant that the Hurricane was far quicker to repair than the Spitfire, as long as nothing vital was hit, the repair simply entailed sticking a fabric patch over the bullet holes and a quick dab of paint!Cool The stringers closest to the open rear were made from lengths of stretched sprue carefully glued into place with liquid poly. The section behind (or actually in front of) the larger ribs will hardly be seen once the fuselage is put together, all that is required here is the ‘impression’ of the stringers so I used a variation on the corrugated sheet method employed in both Messines and the Dispersal Hut roof. Instead of the brass sheet former, I used the blunt back of a modelling knife blade to score the same soft metal sheet from Mum’s eye gel tubes as seen in Photo 8. Once a large enough piece was scored, it was cut to shape and super glued into the fuselage interior as shown in Photo 9. Photo 10 shows those ribs from the drilled out side as promised whilst Photo 11 shows both sides of the fuselage after the smaller metal cross struts had been added and the whole lot given a coat of primer. The smaller struts were thinner lengths of Rico rod. I think I glued them in with a drop of Contacta poly on the ends as it gave more of an ‘instant grab’ (and didn’t flood the whole interior with liquid poly like the first attempt did!)Blink
Finally, in Photo 12, the side frame assembly has been painted up. The inner wall was painted with Admiralty Yellow Ochre then tinted once dry with a thinned down Citadel Rust Wash for the inner face of the doped fabric. The framework was painted with the Humbrol Polished Aluminium Metal Cote and the area around the frame was given another detail wash with Citadel Skaven Brown to highlight the frames. OK, that’s the easy part! In Part two, the fuselage halves go together and I have to try and build the cross members in-situ!Crying

Until then, Happy Modelling to you All!BigGrin


Robin.
Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
Hurricane pic 5.JPG
Hurricane pic 6.JPG
Hurricane 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
ModelMania
#92 Posted : 01 July 2015 11:06:26

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Love the Bowser Robin, I think this is going to be a museum quality diorama when finished and will be fun to look at with so much attention to detail and activity going on around the airfield - great stuff!! Drool Love Cool

Shame you have to cut the tail off the Hurricane, I've always thought that bulbous Hawker trademark fin was such a nice shape and shows it's heritage all the way back to the earlier Hart, Hind, Fury and other biplane fighters from the pen of Sir Sydney Camm?! I presume that you've gone to all the trouble of detailing the internal stringers because the severed fuselage will be open and not blanked off? Great work Robin, love your attention to detail and this is one of my favourite threads on MS at the moment, keep it coming!! Cool ThumpUp

All the best, great modelling going on here!!

P.S. - Small correction for you though Robin if you will allow me (sorry to be so pedantic but I know you appreciate accuracy)? Those "curved flat ribs (the vertical bits)" as you call them, in the rear fuselage, aren't ribs at all ... they're 'formers'?! Ribs and spars in the wings, formers and stringers in the fuselage old bean ... tut,tut, LOL!! Flapper Flapper Cool ThumpUp



Kev BigGrin
Plymouth57
#93 Posted : 01 July 2015 11:52:39

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Ah! Formers! That's right, I wasn't sure but I was so busy typing away I couldn't be bothered to spin my computer chair around and pick up the reference book from behind me to check!!Blushing Blushing Blushing

And you're right about the rear end, lots more err, bits to come there!BigGrin I'm also working out a particularly sneaky way to get around the fact that the old girl is 'balancing' on her two wheels! (Watch this space!)Blink

Many thanks for that Kev!


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
davetwin
#94 Posted : 01 July 2015 21:02:53

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Yet again some more fantastic modelling on show here, excellant work Robyn and as always a joy to follow Cool
stevie_o
#95 Posted : 01 July 2015 21:22:38

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Gibbo
#96 Posted : 02 July 2015 02:38:19

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Super detailing at it's finest, you really are setting a benchmark here mate.
Paul
Building: DelPrado HMS Victory. Building: DeAgostini Sovereign Of The Seas.
ModelMania
#97 Posted : 02 July 2015 10:56:20

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I'm intrigued to see how you go about balancing the Hurricane on two wheels Robin? Huh Confused Blink

Maybe insert some brass rod from the base, right up through the main gear legs then bent at right angles along the span of the wing then right angles again across the chord of the wing (cantilever fashion)? Or you could just have brass pins from the base into the underside of the wheels and finely balance the aircraft with some lead either side of the fulcrum point (kind of a CG solution?), though I think that solution may leave the model open to being easily damaged or dislodged from the diorama? There would also be a lot of strain on the plastic main gear legs due to the weight of the model and the lead ballast combined and being quite small and flimsy in 1:72 scale, they'd surely break if the model were to be accidentally knocked? Personally I would go for the cantilevered brass rod option as it's easier to balance and much more rigid?

Either way I think it'll be an interesting problem to solve though might look a little odd when done, with two thirds of a Hurricane defying the laws of gravity - great focal point and talking point in the diorama though and great fun to construct?! Blink BigGrin Cool ThumpUp


Kev BigGrin
jase
#98 Posted : 02 July 2015 14:12:04

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been a while since I popped in. build is really comming along, as always love the detail you add, and at such a small scale - really impressive. love what your doing.

jase
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Plymouth57
#99 Posted : 06 July 2015 18:32:47

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Grateful thanks as always to Dave, Stevie, Paul, Kev and Jase!Blushing
Some really great ideas there Kev, against those my own solution seems almost like a cheat! I won't give too many details away just yet but suffice it to say my own method is more like giving the impression that she's balancing on two wheels!BigGrin You are partly right about the wires in the wheels however but the U/C legs are so flimsy in this scale you'd need to totally replace the whole thing with brass to get her balancing for real! More to be revealed.Blink

In Photo 1 we have the main components of the Hurricane’s lower cockpit having been just glued into place. The entire cockpit floor and the rudder pedal assembly seen here are all painted in polished aluminium so there’s no point in painting anything first before fixing in place. The only component not shown here is the control column, although that is also mainly aluminium, it will receive the same treatment as the Spitfire columns with a cable added to the rear of the firing button.
Photo 2 is not really a part of the progressing build, its included here as a warning to be more observant during the build! Unlike the Spits, a Hurricane ‘at rest’ does normally appear to ‘droop’ it’s ailerons (and not FLAPS as I’ve always called them!Blushing ) The two-part wings on the Hurricane kit means a two part aileron on each side. The top wing section shown here had both of the ailerons slit at the ends and bent down slightly. On one particular night I picked up the wing to move it and noticed to my horror that one of the things was missing! It must have snapped off without me noticing and a quick search of the worktop found no sign of it. What followed was the most thorough search and clean up operation that my workroom has had in a long time – but still no sign of the missing part. Various thoughts were going through my mind, use the bottom half laying on the ground as if it was removed for maintenance, scratch build another (not my favourite idea!) and even removing the ailerons from Test Bed Tim (you’ll be meeting him later) and replacing both sets. I did absolutely no modelling that night. Even a quick prayer to St. Anthony (the Patron Saint of Lost Articles) didn’t produce any results, or so I thought. Five minutes later I gave up in disgust and picked the flaming wing up again to put it back and that’s when I found the blasted aileron – not missing at all, just bent round double and hiding under the wing itself! So maybe St Anthony did hear me, the lesson is to be more careful and a lot more observant!Blink Blushing Blushing Crying
Anyway, back to the build! The control column with its cable has now been fitted on, once the floor and pedals had been painted as seen in Photo 3. At the same time the cockpit seat assembly and the instrument panel was cemented into the left hand side of the fuselage. Once they were completely dry the two halves of the fuselage could at last go together. This is where the assembly becomes a little more difficult. In the Spitfires, the fuselage halves were just that, a complete half, which was glued to it's opposite side. In the Hurricane it’s a little more complicated than that, like the Spit, there is no bottom at the wing root but unlike the Spit, there’s no bottom under the fuselage at all until you get back to the rudder. This makes it impossible to clamp the sides together without springing the top apart again. The easiest solution, as seen in Photo 4, was to just glue the front half together and leave the rear until the initial join was set hard. With the front half now self supporting, the rear half can be given a good brush of liquid poly and held together by clamping the rudder end. Now the really finicky bit began. The vertical aluminium frames built into the fuselage sides have to be joined by horizontal struts at both top and bottom. This was mainly a case of trial and error, the Riko styrene rod was cut oversized and trimmed down sliver by sliver until it just fitted in place where it was then glued in position with super glue. The ‘trapezoidal’ framework created can be seen in Photo 5. Also visible in this pic ‘up the front’ is the underside of a plasticard shelf which fits just behind the seat bulkhead, on top of the shelf is the radio equipment (just a couple of waste sprue pieces filed into rectangular blocks – you aren’t going to see much up in there!)Flapper As you can also see, the tail end has been cut away following the lines previously pencilled on. The fuselage was cut through with an Exacto Razor Saw which produced a fairly clean cut with only minimal clean up required afterwards.
That left the bottom section of the fuselage still to be detailed as shown in Photo 6. This section only required a couple more drilled out metal formers and another batch of stretched sprue stringers. In this shot, the floor has already been sawn through to fit the fuselage bottom. Note the four arrows, these show where the moulded shelf which locates the fuselage floor to the sides, has had to be filed away to incorporate the tubular struts previously glued into the sides. In Photo 7, the fuselage has been fitted into the wing assembly at last, the upper and lower wing sections having been glued together, and allowed to completely set. You have to remember to paint both sides of the upper wing before gluing them together, the top centre forms the floor of the cockpit and the underside centre forms the top of the wheel well (all in the usual aluminium (I thought they said this thing was mostly wood and fabric!!) The two slots at the front will take the underbelly radiator later and the big circular hole is supposed to be filled in with a clear plastic underside ID lamp. I didn’t bother with the plastic part though, I’ll fill the hole in with Micro Kristal Klear when all the painting and weathering is complete, in the meantime it’s a very convenient spot to stick in a bamboo kebab skewer to hold the model during airbrushing!BigGrin
It was only after the first primer coat that I realised I was wrong about the two part clear canopy. I’d thought that being in two parts meant that it could be modelled either open or closed – WRONG! If you look at the top of the fuselage (arrowed) in Photo 8, you can see a ridge moulded into the side. This is as far back as the sliding canopy will fit, in other words, closed only! The moulded ridge tapers off back along the fuselage and the only way to model the hood fully back is to sand off the excess plastic back to the point as shown in Photo 9. This is not the easiest job with the seat and bulkhead sticking up I can tell you! This was the final ‘rough cut’ shown here, once the hood fitted I then smoothed the fuselage down further with a finer grade of wet and dry.
In the next instalment, the Hurricane gets her paint job and I’ll reveal just whose mount she becomes (any guesses?)
Until then here’s another little movie related question – what was a Proctuka? Hint: they never actually made it on screen!Flapper

Happy Modelling to you All!


Robin
Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
Hurricane pic 8.JPG
Hurricane pic 9.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
ModelMania
#100 Posted : 06 July 2015 21:24:28

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Great work as always Robin, lovely detail and looking forward to meeting 'Test Bed Tim' i guess he's an engine or airframe fitter?

A 'Proctuka' is a Percival Proctor (actually there were three) light utility aircraft that was converted to look like a German 'Stuka' for use in the film. Photos are here:


http://www.bing.com/imag...ka+photos&FORM=IGRE


Without researching I would guess that the Hurricane would be marked up as Douglas Baders' aircraft?

Good stuff Robin, well done mate and already looking forward to the next instalment!! Cool ThumpUp


Kev BigGrin
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