Hi guys,
This is my first post to this forum and I will put only civil stuff (well sorta civil) on here as I am loyal to AMI and also LSP and don't like to have too many forums going on at one time.
Here is my WIP of the Revell Bell X-1 in the preferred scale of 1/32. An older kit, it was produced in 1988 and maintains some of the technical aspects of kits from that vintage, namely raised panel lines and some soft detail. As I am depicting it when it was operated by NACA (a US federal agency) I guess it sorta qualifies as a civil bird.
Here's where I am at. I have this on AMI as well but for those that self destructed or where Terminated, here it is!
There was a bit of a story behind this model. I started this one about 10 months ago, with some parts glued together etc. I was contained in a large zip-lock bag. I then moved house and couldn't find it again no matter how hard I tried. It was only until I did a bit of a stash stocktake a couple of weeks ago that I opened the Trumpeter F-105 box, and there it was! I was so happy that I re-started it. Also this one should't be to long a build and as I am on holidays at the moment and thought that I would rather have a couple of finished models from stalled projects (like my Sopwith Triplane and this one) than half a half completed big build.
So into the WIP.
A big downfall of the Revell kit is the really small engine nozzles that look like a `sausage roll being thrown down a hallway'.
I scratchbuilt a new set of nozzles and cast a copy for use on other projects. I added some more detail to the resin part and also included the taper inside each cone so that it looks much more realistic,
Problem solved
I scrubbed off all of the detail of the kit panel and replaced it with the excellent airscale bezels and decal instruments. I also added the switches from stretched sprue, and to save painting them, I used some silver sprue from the Revell Mirage.
To tart the panel up even more, I gave it a coat of Tamiya Semi gloss clear to give it all the same sheen, and then applied clear canopy glue to each instrument to simulate the glass.
Here is the completed side panel. I think there is a bit of fantasy with the configuration of the part on the behalf of Revell, but I thought it would be OK, save for the same instrument bezel treatment as above. The stencil date has come from this excellent sheet as reviewed here:
http://www.britmodeller.com/forums/inde ... mh-models/
Here is the control column, not quite finished yet.