Next up is assembling the intake. Here is where the vagueness of the instructions come into play. The Typhoon is a unique aircraft in it's design. The multi-part layout is quite fiddly and takes patience and test fitting to get installed correctly. Building the intake trunk itself is uneventful. It is attaching it to the air frame correctly is the challenge.
The intake interior is a Lt Blue. The engine faces are blank and not very deep. Though deep enough that it is not easy to peek into once it is installed.
Going to leave off the forward splitter until I have the intake installed.
Now the to start gathering the other parts, intake roof, and side panels. The instruction sheet again is vague in how to attach these parts, so instead I will install them when I have the intake attached to the fuselage.
Doing it this way will align better and also will use Tamiya slow setting cement so I can adjust the parts before the cement sets.
At the start of the build when assembling the cockpit and the nose portion of the fuselage was part 28A, again the placement was vague, so I decide to wait until I get to this step in how it showed be placed in the fuselage. The location where it goes and getting the correct angle.
Finally with the intake installed, the vent installed as well, still some seam work will need to be addressed despite how careful I was or tried to be oh will. So far though it's coming along.
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Next up to assemble the wings. Thanks for viewing.
2 additional images. Click to enlarge.