OK I have been spoilt. I have worked on a steady diet of Tammy, Hassy and Trumpy kits and though each has its own issues overall the engineering and fit has been great. I remember the Revell kits of the 70's and how bad they were. Based on reviews I bought the 'cheap as chips' AR196 and it was a great kit, OK the instructions were poor and the canopy was crap but overall it was a great kit. Revell have turned a corner I thought and expected great things from my JU88.
I was wrong.
The instructions are the worse I have seen. Not just poor, but misleading. The engineering provides challenges at every turn. Vague locations for parts and a poor fit plague this kit. Last night I spent the whole evening struggling with the undercarraige, wondering why the parts just did not fit. Wrong parts, swap them around and still did not fit. Checked back to the instructions and, as far as I could tell I was getting it the right way around. Checked elsewhere on the instruction sheet and it clearly illustrates the parts in place the other way around. So I did a dry fit in the opposite direction to the instructions and, while typically Revell it was not perfect, it did fit. Having worked it out I then have to struggle with vague location tabs and vague placement, no hope of succeeding how the instructions say of course.
Well I will persist and will finish the JU88, naturally. Fighting it all the way.
The result though is that I am reminded why I am happy to pay 3 or 4 times as much for the superior engineering of Tammy, Hassy, Trump and ZM.
I am cured. I no longer look at the new 32 scale Uhu and think about buying it. If I fancy a Uhu I will happily pay out for the ZM kit at 3 times the price. You get what you pay for.
I might have to wander into the realm of Revell once more though. I have a specific project in mind for which I will need a 32 scale mk1 Spitfire and as Revell are bringing out new tool a MkII soon I might have to buy that one to convert. Unless Trump, Hassy or another decent kit manufacturer says they are bringing out a Mk1 or II that is.
So ROG - you let yourselves down. Not very Germanic of you this poor engineering.
I was wrong.
The instructions are the worse I have seen. Not just poor, but misleading. The engineering provides challenges at every turn. Vague locations for parts and a poor fit plague this kit. Last night I spent the whole evening struggling with the undercarraige, wondering why the parts just did not fit. Wrong parts, swap them around and still did not fit. Checked back to the instructions and, as far as I could tell I was getting it the right way around. Checked elsewhere on the instruction sheet and it clearly illustrates the parts in place the other way around. So I did a dry fit in the opposite direction to the instructions and, while typically Revell it was not perfect, it did fit. Having worked it out I then have to struggle with vague location tabs and vague placement, no hope of succeeding how the instructions say of course.
Well I will persist and will finish the JU88, naturally. Fighting it all the way.
The result though is that I am reminded why I am happy to pay 3 or 4 times as much for the superior engineering of Tammy, Hassy, Trump and ZM.
I am cured. I no longer look at the new 32 scale Uhu and think about buying it. If I fancy a Uhu I will happily pay out for the ZM kit at 3 times the price. You get what you pay for.
I might have to wander into the realm of Revell once more though. I have a specific project in mind for which I will need a 32 scale mk1 Spitfire and as Revell are bringing out new tool a MkII soon I might have to buy that one to convert. Unless Trump, Hassy or another decent kit manufacturer says they are bringing out a Mk1 or II that is.
So ROG - you let yourselves down. Not very Germanic of you this poor engineering.
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