Here is some recent progress on the Kinetic Etendard, enhanced with Eduard colored etch. Actually the first thing to do before the etch was to paint the other bigger parts that would be closed up within the fuselage. The wheel wells and intakes are natural metal and I thought first of using Vallejo Model Air Aluminum. I won’t share pics of this as the results were terrible and I simply stripped all of this off to start again. I don’t know what your experiences are with that paint, but I found the aluminum ridiculously thin, fragile and almost devoid of pigment. It also never dried properly. Anyway, I went instead with the excellent Vallejo Metal Color acrylics, as shown.
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1. I won't use this stuff again, unless someone can tell me they got better results somehow.
The wells turned out fine, as did the intake trunking. I was already painting some undercarriage parts for the Buffalo, so I just did it all at the same time. This meant no leftover paint so was pretty efficient.
The next part was to fit the etch. This was an actually an extremely delicate and time-consuming task. I had noticed how close all of the plastic tub parts fit inside the fuselage when dry-fitting - no gaps or room for etch of the same dimesnions. I therefore anticipated correctly that I would have to trim the Eduard parts that would cover the plastic parts and increase their thickness. First off was the sidewalls, trimmed a full mm or more so that the edge of the tub would fit around the piece.
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1. I had to trim the etch to make sure that the tub plastic would go around it here. Neglecting this would spell disaster for the etch and fuselage fit.
You can’t leave this because it would force the fuselage halves apart (complicating the windscreen fit too, obviously). To make sure everything would fit, I attached each trimmed etch part with a few drops of Gator glue first and then dry fitted the fuselage, re-trimming and re-positioning the etch as I went (a long trial and error process). This went well. When everything looked OK, I scraped of the Gator glue and substituted superglue. Thanks goodness I had an excellent Tamiya diamond file to trim the tiny etch pieces without damaging them.
IMHO, color etch has two challenges for the modeler, besides the tininess of each piece to be fitted. One is that the color glaze can easily flake off if the part is bent, overexposed to superglue or accidentally scraped. I avoided this with great care. The second problem is that the finish is very shiny, so may require modification to look better.
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1. I needed to leave a tiny gap at the edge here so that the sidewall etch would not bind on the console etch.
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1. This detail looks very muddled in bright light bu much better inside the pit with normal viewing angles, in shadow.
In fact, in normal lighting and hidden away inside the fuselage, the shininess is not a problem and the detail comes out beautifully. In some cases though, some extra work helps (see scotch tape mod below).
A note on how I handled the etch, including some incredibly small pieces for the IP. I rolled up some Tamiya tape into a cylinder about the diameter of a toothpick to pick up and position each part for gluing.
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1. Obviously not an etch piece but just to show you how I did it. 🙂
This works better than tweezers, usually, because there is no danger of launching the etch across the room with excess tweezer pressure. Getting everything in place when glued went well, with quite a bit of re-gluing when the tight fit squeezed off some bits.
Now the tape fix. I noticed that the radar scope looked odd when it didn’t reflect light to differentiate it from the panel around it, as its glass cover would dictate.
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1. The radar scope looks exactly like the panel around it - I couldn't just leave this...
I decided to put a thin piece of plastic over it to make it pop out better. What could be thinner than scotch tape and also have its own adhesive? I’d never done this before but decided to try it.
I put three layers of Scotch Tape (Brits call this Cello Tape, I think) on a piece of styrene card. I then punched our several pieces and lifted the tape off the disc with an Exacto knife.
It took a few tries to get a cleanly punched disc of tape. It was easy to put this on the panel and burnish it down with a toothpick. Here are the results in strong light.
In more normal light the effect is subtler but good.
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1. I thionk the whole IP looks at its best here, including the radar scope fix. The muddle of the earlier pic is eliminated and cleaned up in lower light.
Lastly, I test fitted the fuselage again. Good clearance and also an opportunity to see how the IP and consoles looked when in shadow in the pit. Looks good, I think.
So, this is a very different experience than with the Skyhawk cockpit. The etch is not really labor saving, so not so easy as it might seem. Nonetheless, you might find the detail is better than a carefully painted cockpit, especially in lower light.
Next up will be to assemble the intakes and burner cans for each model, do the nose weight and get them sealed up. BTW, I will do the SuE ejection seat later and fit it after the pit is closed up. it is too exposed and has too much harness and firing handle detail to sit there while I work on the rest o f the model. Too fragile. That’s it for now. Comments welcome.