Tonight's progress.
Yesterday I sprayed the canopy flat black after I had masked it off using frisket film and Scotch invisible tape. Today I sprayed the canopy again, but this time I used the "Ame-Iro" color over the black. Hopefully this will give the illusion of black interior canopy frames.
Next was more detail painting on the pilot. I'm really not too good at this... I also touched up the blue-black color inside the cockpit area on the top of the fuselage.
This was followed by installation of the antennae and loop on the rear cockpit deck.
Next I installed the canopy after I removed the masking material. I used white glue for this step.
Overall view so far...
The landing gear came next. I used "Ultra Bright" Bare Metal Foil on the landing gear oleo strut. I cut a small section of foil and wrapped it around the strut to simulate the real shock struts. Once this was completed, I installed both of the main landing gear struts and supported the model so that they could dry overnight.
In this picture you can see how the kit engine looks without any additional details added.
On to the propeller assembly...
I originally sprayed the entire prop with Model Master "Metallizer" Aluminum Plate color. It looks good on the spinner, but the early War Zero props were highly polished. It just didn't look right to me. So I covered the front of the blades in "Ultra Bright Chrome" Bare Metal Foil.
Here's how it looked after I covered the front of one blade. You can look at the other two blades as a comparison, sort of a "before" and "after"...
This photo shows how the propeller looked once all three blades were covered in foil.
Next up were the small decals.
Here are the propeller warning stripes. They are too wide and I will trim them to the correct length once the decals have completely dried.
The landing gear decals were next... They need to be trimmed a little too. The clear carrier film is too wide. I used a flash here to give a better impression of the "Ame-Iro" color.
My "Koga" Zero is getting much closer to being completed now... I still have a few small details to take care of. Things like the small landing gear position indicator struts and fuel tank caps still need to be painted red.
Here's a close up of the landing gear...
Followed by a frontal view of the engine and propeller.
Now I need to find out if Koga's Zero had a radio antennae or if it was simply cut off.
Another bit of research will have to be done to see if this plane indeed had a wide yellow fuselage stripe behind the Hinomaru, and a smaller horizontal yellow stripe below the "DI-108" numbers and letters on the fin / rudder assembly.
If anyone out there knows for sure, please let me know... Thanks.
Enjoy, and comments are encouraged.