AMT 1/48 Douglas P-70 Night Fighter

Started by Spiros Pendedekas · 140 · 1 year ago · 1/48, A-20, AMT, Douglas, Night Fighters, P-70
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    Spiros Pendedekas said 3 years ago:

    Thanks my friends @eb801, @holzhamer, pb_legend and @coling!

    Yep, the A-20/P-70 was for sure on of AMT's better offerings. It has good general shape, well detailed cockpit OOB (les detailed gunners area, admittedly), MLG legs with brake lines molded etc. Not bad for a 90's era kit! It is regularly reboxed by Italeri (once Revell reboxed the A-20, as well), with better styrene quality (though I found the AMT styrene just as nice, despite the moaning I've read...). Quite a bit of AM exists, too.

    Well, about my current running builds, I just cannot stay out of yet another GB, there are such nice GBs here! And the people who run them, but also the members, are wonderful guys; how can I refrain from joining? 🙂 Since I have something like 8-10 ongoing builds, I try to focus at the "GB" ones, posting even a tiny step for each one of them relatively frequently. I admit I was scared to have many ongoing projects runnung simultaneously, but it is manageble, and the feedback from our friends here is uterly rewarding.

    Andrew, I also have an A-20 kit, looking forward to put it together. So, after clearing some bench space (famous last words...), we might join forces and build them. Our friend @lgardner might join, as well, so as to finish his half finished one!

    Colin, regrettably :-), I admit that, whenever possible, in my builds (such as in this one), I assemble the plane and paint the cockpit, ummmm, after exterior painting... So, yes, the P-7) is glued together! After external painting, I will brush paint the crew areas with their basic interior green, then detail paint IP(s), consoles, levers etc black/red/yellow/white, with my 10/0 brush, apply a light black wash and some drybrushing. I will finally install the seat and stick, followed by the canopy, that I will have already brush painted. I will fair the resulting gaps with white glue. I know this approach is not very puristic: I might prepare/paint the full cockpit before installing to the model, then mask it etc. I might also install/fair the canopies before painting, mask them and then paint the model...oh, well! 🙂

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    Tom Bebout said 3 years ago:

    Just caught up Spiros, and thanks for mentioning my P-70 build posted here on iModeler. Your progress has been quite impressive to date. The AMT kit has no parts detailing the radar operator position so I did some research an added a radar scope and assorted boxes associated with the radars of that period. Plus I changed the gunner seat out for one that's more realistic from the spares box. Most glaring is the absence of the elevation antenna's that were mounted on the wings. I used the antenna provided in the old Monogram Mosquito night fighter version for them. If I did one again I thing I would use a very dark grey color instead of black or a custom mix of the two. Keep up the good work.

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    Colin Gomez said 3 years ago:

    Hey. Spiros. As I said about the cockpit painting technique, just curious. You do some really attractive models and whatever works for you is 100% legit. Since I got the fuselage halves together on my P-61 and SuE without glue for various technical reasons, I thought you might be doing the same thing. For what its worth, your P-70/A-20 build got me thinking about certain advantages in painting a pit after fuselage assembly and even after painting the exterior. One of the things I learned from over at Hyperscale was pre-painting an entire cockpit flat black, then misting on the pit color over that downward over the sidewalls and other components. The idea was to create shadows that you could get best by leaving a pre-shade under each rib and detail (this was something I first saw Brett Green do when finishing his CA Westland Whirlwind, years ago). I tend to use this technique routinely now, especially with US Chromate Green cockpits. The thing is, the full effect is most visible when the pit is closed up as a kind of visual illusion of depth that accents or enhances real shadows. You could achieve the same thing (and speed up cockpit painting) by brush painting the pit all black first, then using your airbrush for the main color. The shadows would fall all in the right places because the structure of the pit would block the spray just like real fittings and ribbing block light. The instrument panel and black consoles could be masked off as black or painted black again after the green overspray. All external paintwork would be easy to mask in the process, the pit having a boxy opening. Anyway, I am sure brush painting would look fine anyway, especially under the closed perspex with attention on the seat. I just thought this technique might be of interest and save you time, while creating a rather attractive effect. Once again, not my idea but something cool I picked up from a fellow modeler. 🙂 Incidentally, I have a couple of AMT A-20 Havocs in suspended production - one to do a D-Day aircraft (Havocs look great in D-Day stripes) and another to do an Pacific Theater Air Apaches Havoc with rockets and a shark mouth. I think the AMT A-20s are great kits that can be turned in to gems with patience. Watching your work with great interest, as always.

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    Spiros Pendedekas said 3 years ago:

    Thanks my friend @tom-bebout! Your excellent build is already a reference model for my P-70! I for sure will try to follow your "improvements" road, regarding the extra antennas and radar operator compartment. And yes, i will try to paint it in an off-black scheme!

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    Spiros Pendedekas said 3 years ago:

    Thanks my friend @coling! This shading technique sounds great! I must give it a try!

    Regarding my brush painting, it more has to do with easiness and also with the fact I am used to it. By all means, my cockpit results are definitely A LOT lesser than great jobs, like yours (your Buffalo cockpit just spread into my mind - oh, my! this is a masterpiece!).

    It is just that I usually close my canopies, so the lesser job is not so easilly justified 🙂

    The AMT Havocs are super cool kits. I have another one unbuilt, planning to finish it as a Russian bird (OD over gray, with light green patches on top, a cool slogan at one side, no Russian stars on top of the wings, how cooler can it get?)... So, since our firiends Erik @eb801 and Louis @lgardner have already expressed kind of interest for doing/finishing their A-20s "at some time", am I seeing a bulding wish thread here? 🙂 In case of a "go" decision, count me in, Gentlemen!

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    Walt said 3 years ago:

    I would have never thought to paint the cockpit after assembly. I realize that much often can't be seen after assembly and painting what you can makes sense. I know armor guys that usually build everything and then paint afterwards. I for one enjoy building and painting the cockpit, its a good place to practice skills used on the outside of the model too. Colling, @coling, I also have seen and used Brett Green's method of pre-painting black, to help increase or force shadows. That coupled with a wash often really makes the cockpit pop!

    In the end it is the modelers preference and agree that Spiros, @fiveten, makes some nice kits. My hat is of to him for doing such great work.

    I look forward to seeing this P-70 with paint!

    3 attached images. Click to enlarge.

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    Stephen W Towle said 3 years ago:

    Commenting on the sanding of the nose of your AMT P-70. Spiros what you've done so far . . . when looking at the photo you posted of the real aircraft, you could paint a lighter color of Black/Gray, mask off the painted transparency's and paint a darker shade with several paint layers leaving a out line of the metal bracing. That should be effective in representing the nose.

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    Spiros Pendedekas said 3 years ago:

    Those are some amazing cockpit pics @luftwaffe-birdman! The second one of the B-17 could easilly pass for 1:1..
    This technique might be very effective for representing the nose, @stephen-w-towle!

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    Chuck A. Villanueva said 3 years ago:

    Well I strapped in next to Erik, dozed off, woke up and Spiros has his P-70 almost darn ready for paint. As mentioned pretty much by everyone here, I also have this kit and one other

    A-20 Havoc. And I have seen a few built and done very well. This one as well will be a nice model once finished. You know everyone has their own techniques and styles in building. Some borrowed to great success. But the end result is what matters. As one has certain preferences which works for them and that is all that matters. The passion is there regardless. So far Spiros looking good. Looking forward to the next installment.

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    Spiros Pendedekas said 3 years ago:

    Thanks my friend @uscusn! The AMT (issued from italeri, lately,also once reboxed by Revell) Havocs are not bad kits at all! For whatever reason (maybe only in my mind), I thought they were lesser kits, plagued with a few issues, but this is definitely not the case: they are not modern "Tamiya", but they are good, solid kits, with good fit (not perfect, but a lot better than, say, tha Monogram B-26; and their latest reissues with better plastic, excellent decals and improvised instruction sheets makes them even more appealing. If only bench spaces could be cleared enough, in order for an A-20 mini thread...

    This unsung hero deseves it!

    Always a pleasure to see you visiting my threads, my good friend!

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    Spiros Pendedekas said 3 years ago:

    An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure: (mostly recovering actions) update...

    The statement that beautiful, detailed boxarts are always correct is, of course, wrong...
    Having read somewhere-somehow that AMT P-70 cowlings are wrong, I assumed that the different looking boxart (very detailed) ones would be right. This belief was even more amplified by the (wrong) exhausts depiction at my (original) AMT painting diagrams...

    The fact that Italeri reissued this kit in 2013 with a dramatic boxart, depicting "Dusty" with the kit supplied cowlings did not seem to affect me (it should, though...).
    So, as you might have read at my boring thread above, I removed the exhaust protrusions (wrong!) and flattened a tad the two bilateral air exit protrusions (not that wrong: they are merely noticeable in reality).
    In order to restore the small exhaust fairings that I had removed, I first downloaded the recent very nice Italeri instructions, that contain a head-on parts diagram. I isolated the section that contains the cowlings... As you can see there are 7 protrusions at the starboard and 6 at the port one. I enlarged the image sufficiently, placed the cowlings at my laptop screen... ...and copied the fairings locations... ...I then shaved some round sprue rods... ...cut them in small parts... ...and attached them in place... Upon curing, they will be faired to look like in reality.
    Some better news is that the nose framing did not disappear...
    The underbelly gondola had its gun holes drilled out and attached into place, as well...
    Thanks for stopping by (and I hope this will be my last unnecessary loop, at least for this build... 🙂 ).

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    Spiros Pendedekas said 3 years ago:

    First puttying


    I applied a first round of putty, here are a=the results:
    Thanks for stopping by!

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    Louis Gardner said 3 years ago:

    Spiros, @fiveten
    Man you are moving at light speed on this build ! One day I notice the build thread was started, and the next time I check in you are almost ready to spray on some color...

    It's looking magnificent !

    You just might be able to talk me into finishing up my A-20... and as I mentioned earlier, I have some more of these AMT 1/48 scale A-20's and 2 of the P-70's still left in the stash. I'll try to get a good picture of the kits tomorrow and I'll post them here.

    They do build up rather quickly, but I was seriously thinking about adding some details to the cockpit and rear gunner position, along with some details in the wheel wells and bomb bays on one of these. That would eat up some precious time... something I currently don't have too much extra to spare at the moment.

    With some extra work, these kits can be turned into show stoppers.

    Thanks for posting these updates.

    Looking good my friend. Did I ever tell you that the school bus driver we had in Middle school was a pilot who flew A-20's in WW2 ? His name was Mr. Gridley. I never knew anything else about him, such as what unit or where he served. Too bad as he was a fine gentleman.

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    Tom Cleaver said 3 years ago:

    @coling - I haven't heard that cockpit shading technique so well explained before. I am definitely going to try it - thanks!

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    Tom Cleaver said 3 years ago:

    @fiveten - yeah, @lgardner is right - you are building this thing at warp speed. You alllllllmost have me convinced to go out and hunt one down.