1/32 Hasegawa Fw 190D-13 Yellow 10
Re: 1/32 Hasegawa Fw 190D-13 Yellow 10
Great idea cutting the resin piece in two.
March as one, Don't look back
Odin's sons... Attack!
Unleash hell! Do not repent! Warfare grants us no lament
Let your weapons slash and tear This is no place for fear
Hold the lines! Move as one! In unity our victory's won
Our shields will form a mighty wall
United we shall never fall
Odin's sons... Attack!
Unleash hell! Do not repent! Warfare grants us no lament
Let your weapons slash and tear This is no place for fear
Hold the lines! Move as one! In unity our victory's won
Our shields will form a mighty wall
United we shall never fall
- Stikpusher
- Moderator
- Posts: 19057
- Joined: Sat Apr 05, 2014 8:37 pm
- Location: Ceti Alpha 5
Re: 1/32 Hasegawa Fw 190D-13 Yellow 10
Indeed! And you can easily fill that gap with a piece of styrene strip. Between that and the external piece, the gap would become virtually invisible.
"Surely I have made my meaning plain? I intend to avenge myself upon you, Admiral. I have deprived your ship of power, and when I swing 'round, I intend to deprive you of your life."
FLSM
FLSM
Re: 1/32 Hasegawa Fw 190D-13 Yellow 10
Hey guys! I'm glad I found a way to utilize the Aires wheel well set without having to make an major modifications to the kit. I'll probably use bits of Milliput to anchor the wheel wells into place, much like the Blue Tack. I'll have plenty of time before the putty hardens to make sure the gun barrel openings line up and then I can seep some CA glue into the joints for a more secure bond.
The major exercise of this conversion is the "bulge" and that is what I have been working on yesterday and today. Because it takes so long for Milliput to harden, progress has been slow but I've finally reached a rough approximation of the what bulges will look like.
Using the pieces of styrene as a "base", I've applied Milliput to build up the bulge and transition it back to the fuselage. The pieces of sheet plastic created some issues for me. They were thin enough that I thought they would conform to the curvature of the fuselage. I even took extra care of securing the top joint firmly with Tamiya Extra Thin cement, waiting that to cure and then gluing down the bottom joint. Still, the plastic sheet ended up being too flat and I've had to add a bead of putty down the middle of the white plastic to create a more curved surface.
This took multiple applications of Milliput, with each of them allowing to cure at least 4-6 hours before sanding. In the down time, I ended up painting the seat from the Eagle Editions cockpit, which comes with two versions: one with belts and one without. I'll probably end up using HGW harnesses but I thought I'd see what the other seat would like like with a quick paint job.
After a few iterations of puttying and sanding, I've gotten to a point where the bulge has been established and curvature of the sides of the fuselage have been restored. Unlike the GM resin fuselage, I've elected to fair the bottom edge of the raised area cleanly into the fuselage, creating a single "ridge" on the top and not a bulge with an upper and lower ridge. This is based on the cross-sections of the D-13 in my Dora Volume 2 book.
Time to shoot this sculpting exercise with the some primer to check my work. I used Mr Surfacer 1200 cut with Tamiya Lacquer Thinner.
Hey, where did the bulge go? That's what I thought after I sprayed the primer on. My result is much more subtle than the GM conversion. I can definitely see it in person and also feel it when I run my fingers over the model but it doesn't show up very dramatically in the photos. Is this a good thing or bad thing?
The lack of panel lines or other details adds to the disappearing act and I think the rivet lines will accentuate the curvature. But the disruption camo pattern will act the opposite and help hide the surface curvature. I'm going to set this aside and think about it. There are some edges and transitions that need to be cleaned up... maybe during that process I'll end up liking my result a little more.
The major exercise of this conversion is the "bulge" and that is what I have been working on yesterday and today. Because it takes so long for Milliput to harden, progress has been slow but I've finally reached a rough approximation of the what bulges will look like.
Using the pieces of styrene as a "base", I've applied Milliput to build up the bulge and transition it back to the fuselage. The pieces of sheet plastic created some issues for me. They were thin enough that I thought they would conform to the curvature of the fuselage. I even took extra care of securing the top joint firmly with Tamiya Extra Thin cement, waiting that to cure and then gluing down the bottom joint. Still, the plastic sheet ended up being too flat and I've had to add a bead of putty down the middle of the white plastic to create a more curved surface.
This took multiple applications of Milliput, with each of them allowing to cure at least 4-6 hours before sanding. In the down time, I ended up painting the seat from the Eagle Editions cockpit, which comes with two versions: one with belts and one without. I'll probably end up using HGW harnesses but I thought I'd see what the other seat would like like with a quick paint job.
After a few iterations of puttying and sanding, I've gotten to a point where the bulge has been established and curvature of the sides of the fuselage have been restored. Unlike the GM resin fuselage, I've elected to fair the bottom edge of the raised area cleanly into the fuselage, creating a single "ridge" on the top and not a bulge with an upper and lower ridge. This is based on the cross-sections of the D-13 in my Dora Volume 2 book.
Time to shoot this sculpting exercise with the some primer to check my work. I used Mr Surfacer 1200 cut with Tamiya Lacquer Thinner.
Hey, where did the bulge go? That's what I thought after I sprayed the primer on. My result is much more subtle than the GM conversion. I can definitely see it in person and also feel it when I run my fingers over the model but it doesn't show up very dramatically in the photos. Is this a good thing or bad thing?
The lack of panel lines or other details adds to the disappearing act and I think the rivet lines will accentuate the curvature. But the disruption camo pattern will act the opposite and help hide the surface curvature. I'm going to set this aside and think about it. There are some edges and transitions that need to be cleaned up... maybe during that process I'll end up liking my result a little more.
John aka JKim
-----------<><
-----------<><
Re: 1/32 Hasegawa Fw 190D-13 Yellow 10
I'm really liking the progress here. I would say see what it looks like with a few rivets and panel lines engraved on it before changing it. If you think it needs more then they can easily be filled back in.
March as one, Don't look back
Odin's sons... Attack!
Unleash hell! Do not repent! Warfare grants us no lament
Let your weapons slash and tear This is no place for fear
Hold the lines! Move as one! In unity our victory's won
Our shields will form a mighty wall
United we shall never fall
Odin's sons... Attack!
Unleash hell! Do not repent! Warfare grants us no lament
Let your weapons slash and tear This is no place for fear
Hold the lines! Move as one! In unity our victory's won
Our shields will form a mighty wall
United we shall never fall
Re: 1/32 Hasegawa Fw 190D-13 Yellow 10
Excellent work John!
Stuart Templeton 'I may not be good but I'm slow...'
My blog: https://stuartsscalemodels.blogspot.com/
My blog: https://stuartsscalemodels.blogspot.com/
- Medicman71
- Elite Member
- Posts: 9839
- Joined: Mon Apr 07, 2014 9:32 am
- Location: Houston, Tx
Re: 1/32 Hasegawa Fw 190D-13 Yellow 10
Incredible work on everything as always John.
Mike
Sponsored by Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Saab, BAE, and Dassault
Sponsored by Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Saab, BAE, and Dassault
- BlackSheep214
- Elite Member
- Posts: 10614
- Joined: Sun Apr 06, 2014 8:47 pm
Re: 1/32 Hasegawa Fw 190D-13 Yellow 10
Wow... It looks as if it came straight out of the box without the modifications to create the bulge.
“Who controls the skies, controls the fate of this Earth”
Author unknown- 352nd Fighter Group, Blue-Nosed Bastards of Bodney
“Send one plane it’s a sortie; send two planes it’s a flight; send four planes it’s a test of airpower. - Richard Kohn
Author unknown- 352nd Fighter Group, Blue-Nosed Bastards of Bodney
“Send one plane it’s a sortie; send two planes it’s a flight; send four planes it’s a test of airpower. - Richard Kohn
Re: 1/32 Hasegawa Fw 190D-13 Yellow 10
Thanks guys! The more I think about the bulge, the less I'm inclined to change it. I'm thinking that it is probably more in line with what the actual aircraft designers did when trying to accommodate the larger engine bearers and is supported by the profile drawings. It just doesn't jump out at first glance.
A few minor adjustments were performed per my references. The fuel port on the starboard side is slightly LOWER on the D-13 than the D-9...
And the primer fuel port on the port sides is slightly HIGHER on the D-13 than the D-9...
After some slight touch-up putty was applied, the fuselage was set aside and took out the Eagle Editions tail gear.
The parts go together rather well but I'm going to strengthen the connection between the parts using brass tubing.
I made an axle for the tail wheel.
A larger diameter brass tube was used for the connection between the wheel yoke and gear strut.
The "sit" of the tail gear can be adjusted by shortening the strut. Without modification, you can see that the gear sticks out a little too much, based on reference photos.
So I cut down the strut for a more naturally weighted position of an aircraft in service.
A few minor adjustments were performed per my references. The fuel port on the starboard side is slightly LOWER on the D-13 than the D-9...
And the primer fuel port on the port sides is slightly HIGHER on the D-13 than the D-9...
After some slight touch-up putty was applied, the fuselage was set aside and took out the Eagle Editions tail gear.
The parts go together rather well but I'm going to strengthen the connection between the parts using brass tubing.
I made an axle for the tail wheel.
A larger diameter brass tube was used for the connection between the wheel yoke and gear strut.
The "sit" of the tail gear can be adjusted by shortening the strut. Without modification, you can see that the gear sticks out a little too much, based on reference photos.
So I cut down the strut for a more naturally weighted position of an aircraft in service.
John aka JKim
-----------<><
-----------<><
- Stikpusher
- Moderator
- Posts: 19057
- Joined: Sat Apr 05, 2014 8:37 pm
- Location: Ceti Alpha 5
Re: 1/32 Hasegawa Fw 190D-13 Yellow 10
Those silly engineers had to change the positions of everything...
Nice work on all the changes and upgrades.
Nice work on all the changes and upgrades.
"Surely I have made my meaning plain? I intend to avenge myself upon you, Admiral. I have deprived your ship of power, and when I swing 'round, I intend to deprive you of your life."
FLSM
FLSM
- jeaton01
- Elite Member
- Posts: 2110
- Joined: Thu Apr 23, 2020 9:20 am
- Location: Northern California
- Contact:
Re: 1/32 Hasegawa Fw 190D-13 Yellow 10
Attention to detail, that's what I'm seeing here. Best I take notes.