Just got the four most recent Dora Wings releases for review. This MB 152 (late), the MB 155, MS 230 and J-9 (P-35A). All really nice. The MB 152/155 turn the Classic Airframes kits to door stops. The P-35A demonstrates how unfixably wrong the Hobbycraft P-35A is. The MS 230 is one no one has ever done before.
They are all "top end limited run", but you need to remember "limited run" if you want a "top end" result.
I started fiddling with the MB 152 last night, seeing how the complex (but not complicated) parts breakdown came togeher, and got this result. Figured I had better take photos and post them before it fell together.
With the low-pressure plastic molding, some shapes are difficult, which is why the parts breakdown is as it is.
Each fuselage is in three parts: main fuselage, lower forward fuselage/wing join, and vertical fin. If you take real care in cleaning up the parts and test fitting five times before gluing once, you can get good fit. You will still have to fight ghost seams where the lower forward fuselage joins the main part because it doesn't happen along panel lines, which means the seams have to disappear. I used Mr. Surfacer, followed by two applications and sand-downs of CA glue.
The wing is in six parts: two upper parts, which the two lower parts fit into in order to get a thin trailing edge and thin wingtip, the lower center section, and a spar to glue the lower wing outer parts to. The sequence is: spar and wheel well to lower wing; each lower outer wing to center section; upper sections to now one-piece lower.
The cowling is three parts. Careful fitting gives a good result.
If you do all this with care, test-fitting and modifying - sanding the interior of the lower wings thinner inside where they fit inserts, checking the spar and wheel well fit to the fuselage, each half separately - you can get a good tight fit that will need a minimum of filler.
The kit has four different painting and markings options. If you like early WW2 French fighters, these are good kits and worth the price.
6 attached images. Click to enlarge.