Glad you like it!
The Fw 190 is just underway - and this one has a bit of a cockpit. It's not much, but compared to the last one, it's positively opulent and actually has some detail worth painting.
Glad you like it! Yes, I think that's right, just three days. This was a very simple kit to build with few parts and no internal detail at all. I think I built it in a day and spent the next two painting and otherwise finishing it. The MRP paints dry very fast, literally in minutes and even the enamel Colourcoat (for the RLM 76) dries in four or five hours, bearing in mind I didn't have to mask anything (except the yellow) when spraying the camouflage.And if I see it correctly, you completed the whole project in 3 days! Wow!


Hang on, I thought you said the group build was too short to fit these in?TWO DOWN - THREE TO GO
TWO DOWN - THREE TO GO:
The Fw 190 is now comlplete, and that is the last of the Germans, so the RLM paints are back in the draws.
This is the ircraft flown by Oberstleutnant Josef Priller. He must be one of the best known of all the Luftwaffe 'experten', so there is a lot of information available about him for those interested, so just a few pertinent facts.
He was the Geschwader Kommodore of JG 26 at the time of the invasion, and one of Nazi Germany’s most successful officers. An Oberstleutnant is equivalent to a Wing Commander in the RAF. A Geschwader Kommodore was the officer commanding an entire Luftwaffe Geschwader. The three Gruppen and various other associated elements of JG 26 would total about 150 aircraft, though it is unlikely that this many were operational on June 6. He finally left JG 26 to become Inspekteur der Jagdflieger West on 28 January 1945 and remained in this staff position until the end of the war.
Priller was credited with exactly 100 victories, all of them in the West, and including 10 four engine bombers. Unlike some, his claims can be well matched to Allied losses. He flew 307 combat sorties and was never shot down. Those who have watched ‘The Longest Day’ will be aware that Priller and his wingman, Feldwebel Heinz Wodarczyk, made a strafing attack on Sword beach. Priller, who passed away in 1961, was one of the German consultants on the film. This mission was one of just 70 sorties flown by the single engine fighters of Luftflotte 3 on D-Day. The Allies flew a total, all types, of more than 14,000.
Anyway, here’s the model of Fw 190 A-8, werknummer 170346, ‘Black 13’, as it would have been on D-Day, give or take a couple of extra cannons.
If there is one thing that should be corrected on this kit it is the length of the main undercarriage legs. They seem far too long, as if uncompressed by the weight of the aircraft, and make the thing look gangly on its wheels. Obviously, I didn't do that, but if I built the kit again I would.
Next up the P-51, representing the Americans :smiling3:
I found it a nice kit overall, but it was definitely more of a fiddle to put together than the 109. Getting the nosee right took a bit of doing, and it features that old classic, a join betwen two bits of thin plastic without much support. Also, moulding things like a pitot tube into the front of the wing is asking for them to get knocked off - and it was. I replaced the pitot with a piece of brass wire.If mine turn out half that well I'll be very pleased.




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