Trying to get back into things after the twin hits of moving House and getting ill (still to fully recover from) and seeing lots of people (like Ray) having fun over on BM in the Matchbox 50th Anniversary GB I decided to join in but as usual in a different way.
Bit too rusty to risk some nice Matchbox Kits I have in the "Stash" I was looking through the Part Built, Missing, and Broken Kits that I "inherited" and came across a Twin Otter that was damaged and missing a few parts (well truth be told a lot of parts) and then remembered that before the GB kicked off I had bought a Twin Otter that was supposed to be unstarted only to find out that it was well and truly started and more than part built when I got it Home and badly built at that!
So what to do with these two “Bitsas”?
Well nothing initially other than both kits being reduced to parts but then I happened to be wandering through some old Air Internationals and opened the September 1980 issue that I had “used” before by enlarging the plans of the BAe concept for the AST 403 to make a 1:72 model of it. Funnily enough another article in this issue was on the DHC Dash 7 which even though the Dash 7 was a favourite aircraft I hadn’t read the article only looked at some of the pictures (where have we heard that phrase before?). Anyway to cut a rather long story short the article detailed the “road” from the Twin Otter to the Dash 7 and included a small early Plan of the 1967 concept for the Dash 7 that looked literally and figuratively “midway” between the Twin Otter and the Dash 7.
Hence the seed was sown for the idea of a “Quad Otter” from the bits and pieces of the two Twin Otter “bitsas”.
I’ve made a bit of a start and will post photos in due course but just to mention that as this has progressed I haven’t been bound by either Plans of the early concept or the Dash 7 but have made up a number of things along the way simply because it worked out “easier” to do something that way when hacking up the kits to sort of fit in with the concept/s but most of all have a bit of fun with it to try and get back into the swing of things without being bound by accuracy or rivet counting.
Till next time and the photos or it never happened ...