I am thoroughly enjoying the 1/24 Hawker Typhoon build. It is a great kit, generally a good fit, well engineered and a delight to build. They have also shown that in 1/24 scale at least you do not have to bundle in a lot of p.e. or resin to achieve top-quality detail, it can be done with injection molded plastic only.
But - Airfix are still falling short of what some of our oriental friends achieve with their larger scale aircraft and, as a patriotic Brit, offers some advice that would help the great British company Hornby/Airfix rise to top beating the lot of them...
1/ Improve the design and tooling of your sprues.
While better the Tiffy still has too many ejection pin marks in visible places (at least if you were to build with opened up detail). Also there are a lot of 'dirty' mold seams, not much flash as such, small amounts here and there but overall there is much more clean up necessary than we get with some other manufacturers. On a model like the Tiffy, built to very tight fit tolerances with its particular build-up method, the fit is more open to be compromised than other kits if you do not clean up fully or even if you clean up a bit too much! This can look OK to the eye only for it to translate through to a fit issue much later in the build. Dry fitting can only help up to a point.
The sprue gates remain sometimes still too large and somewhat crude and are often sat on areas of detail. The best manufacturers sculpt the sprue gates positioning them away from areas of detail on mating surfaces. This means there is no risk of damaging detail when cleaning up and, at worse, if you are heavy handed with a sanding stick you may need a smear of filler before a light sanding to hide the join. OK sculpted sprue gates sounds as if it might be a little over the top for something that will be sanded off but - where this is done it shows a great deal of pride from the manufacturer/designer/toolmaker in the presentation of the kit and a desire to create the best possible build experience.
Look at the better Trumpeter kits such as the 1/32 Dauntless to see what I mean. The Dragon 1/32 Bf110 is another example of the sculpted sprue gates.
2/ Use a better quality and slightly harder plastic.
This will help deal with some of the problems mentioned above and will also result in crisper, cleaner detail.
The two kits mentioned above and the Tamiya 1/32 WW2 props are other examples of the kind of plastic I refer to.
3/ Adopt 'slide-mold' technology.
Airfix kits are looking more and more outdated compared to some others. Slide-molding will massively enhance what you can do with injection molding and will make a massive difference to 1/24 kits. This will mean no more drilling out of gun barrels.
The best example of using slide mold tech is the Dragon 1/32 Bf110. But, later this year HK Models will be launching their Mosquito in 1/32 which will be the ultimate in this technology with its fuselage design.
That is it really.... If Airfix can address these things they could be up there beating the best in the world where they belong. Yes, it may add a few £ more to buy a kit but it is worth it and may even increase sales due to the sheer quality of what is produced. I have happily spent £120 or more for a Tamiya 1/32 Spitfire, Mustang or Corsair because I know it is quality and will give me the best possible build experience. Given the time they will take to build, compared to a cheap small scale kit, they do not work out that much more as a £cost per hour in enjoyment - cheaper per/hour than the cinema or a meal out, even cheaper than a night down the pub.
But - Airfix are still falling short of what some of our oriental friends achieve with their larger scale aircraft and, as a patriotic Brit, offers some advice that would help the great British company Hornby/Airfix rise to top beating the lot of them...
1/ Improve the design and tooling of your sprues.
While better the Tiffy still has too many ejection pin marks in visible places (at least if you were to build with opened up detail). Also there are a lot of 'dirty' mold seams, not much flash as such, small amounts here and there but overall there is much more clean up necessary than we get with some other manufacturers. On a model like the Tiffy, built to very tight fit tolerances with its particular build-up method, the fit is more open to be compromised than other kits if you do not clean up fully or even if you clean up a bit too much! This can look OK to the eye only for it to translate through to a fit issue much later in the build. Dry fitting can only help up to a point.
The sprue gates remain sometimes still too large and somewhat crude and are often sat on areas of detail. The best manufacturers sculpt the sprue gates positioning them away from areas of detail on mating surfaces. This means there is no risk of damaging detail when cleaning up and, at worse, if you are heavy handed with a sanding stick you may need a smear of filler before a light sanding to hide the join. OK sculpted sprue gates sounds as if it might be a little over the top for something that will be sanded off but - where this is done it shows a great deal of pride from the manufacturer/designer/toolmaker in the presentation of the kit and a desire to create the best possible build experience.
Look at the better Trumpeter kits such as the 1/32 Dauntless to see what I mean. The Dragon 1/32 Bf110 is another example of the sculpted sprue gates.
2/ Use a better quality and slightly harder plastic.
This will help deal with some of the problems mentioned above and will also result in crisper, cleaner detail.
The two kits mentioned above and the Tamiya 1/32 WW2 props are other examples of the kind of plastic I refer to.
3/ Adopt 'slide-mold' technology.
Airfix kits are looking more and more outdated compared to some others. Slide-molding will massively enhance what you can do with injection molding and will make a massive difference to 1/24 kits. This will mean no more drilling out of gun barrels.
The best example of using slide mold tech is the Dragon 1/32 Bf110. But, later this year HK Models will be launching their Mosquito in 1/32 which will be the ultimate in this technology with its fuselage design.
That is it really.... If Airfix can address these things they could be up there beating the best in the world where they belong. Yes, it may add a few £ more to buy a kit but it is worth it and may even increase sales due to the sheer quality of what is produced. I have happily spent £120 or more for a Tamiya 1/32 Spitfire, Mustang or Corsair because I know it is quality and will give me the best possible build experience. Given the time they will take to build, compared to a cheap small scale kit, they do not work out that much more as a £cost per hour in enjoyment - cheaper per/hour than the cinema or a meal out, even cheaper than a night down the pub.
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