Here is my take so far on the well-known and much-built Tamiya Spitfire IXc in 1/32. First the interior: I did my usual flat black undercoat to create shadows.
I then applied several light layers of Polyscale RAF Cockpit Green (old bottle but still perfect) spraying downward. Interior areas behind the pit were done in Vallejo Acrylic Metal Color (Semi-Matte Aluminum).
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1. I apply white glue to the edge of the fuselage when painting the interior - that way I don't have to scrape of paint later to glue the halves together - the glue is a peelable masking compound.
I did a fair amount of detailing in the cockpit with Eduard photo-etch for a Spitfire Mk V.
This included a multipart assembly for the throttle quadrant which I was quite proud of - the lever are actually workable after assembly!
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1. I created a post from styrene rod to mount these pieces of etch and styrene so that i had a multi-layered assembly with working levers.
Here are some pics of the pit under pit under assembly and finally fully installed before and after buttoning up the fuselage.
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1. these holes were all drilled out
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1. Some tiny decals added from Airscale
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1. Very nice Yahu IP
2. Brass wire added for
depth of detailing
3. more etch detail
& decals added
here in later pics below
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1. Nice stenciling on the HGW cloth belts.
2. i really like the Barracuda stencilling details. Super-authentic but very taxing to apply with a needle and tweezers (high magnification visor required!)
3. I drilled out all of the structural lightening hoes in both bulkheads.
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1. Oxygen hose from an old steel guitar string - hard to bend but great for in-scale detail and surface texture.
2. I made the
mounting loops from
scrap etch.
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1. I will add the gun sight later just before windscreen is attached.
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1. Flat yellow prop tips pre-sprayed for the spitfire and a Ki.84 I am also working on
. The IP is from Yahu - far better than the cartoonish kit version. I added more details with wire solder and brass wire for instrument wiring, plus tiny stencil decals from Barracuda and Airscale and a few scrap decals for other bits. The quilted seat pad mostly hidden under the Sutton harness was made from sheet styrene.The seat belts are cloth with metal buckles from HGW. I had to glue the cloth belts to the rear most part from the etch kit harness to attach it to the rear bulkhead. Some pics show early and later versions of how did this in the end. Final pics show fuselage buttoned up and wings and tail section attached. Also visible is the major painting done on the engine mounts and piping. Wire and styrene bits are the ignition harness which I will insert in holes I pre-drilled in the engine.
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1. Ignition harness for the side of the engine under the exhausts
2. ignition harness for the top of the Merlin
All this will be done when I mount the engine, in case I need to tweak everything so it all fits behind the removable panels. I definitely want to be able to close everything up as well as keeping the engine display option. That's it for now. I will be finishing this build as the mount one of two Canadian aces: either Wally MacLeod or Jack Charles, both in full D-Day stripes.