Red Jet:
Czech Model's 1/48 Yak-15
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The Airplane
By 1945, the United States and Great Britain were
far ahead of the Soviet Union in developing jet-propelled aircraft,
and Germany was ahead of everyone. Red Army units entering Germany
had found aircraft and engines scattered on airfields and sent them
home. Josef Stalin ordered the Red Air Force to develop this new form
of aircraft which potential enemies were obviously working on, with
new aircraft to be delivered as soon as possible.
In February 1945, Alexsandr Yakovlev's design bureau
began development of a straightforward adaptation of the Junkers Jumo
004 turbojet that powered the Me-262 to the airframe of the successful
Yak-3U fighter. Yakovlev used the Yak-3U wings, landing gear, tail
(with a larger rudder to offset increased forward fuselage area) and
most of the aft fuselage. The RD-10 engine was mounted in a new lower
fuselage bay, with nose-mounted intake and exhausting below the center
fuselage. The aircraft was armed with two NS-23 23mm cannon with 60 rounds
per gun. A little over a year later, the first prototype Yak-15 was ready
for flight. The prototype's rubber tail wheel soon gave way to a stainless
steel wheel due to its proximity to hot exhaust gases.
The Yak-15 was by far the most primitive and conservative
adaptation of the jet engine to fighter design of any aircraft developed
by the competing air forces during this period, yet it provided the
V-VS with the experience of jet flight and operations without imposing
development costs the Soviet Union was unprepared for. Approximately
300 Yak-15s were produced in 1946-47 before production was phased out
in favor of the Yak-17 (see Chris Banyai-Riepl's review elsewhere).
While the airplane only saw limited service, it is historically important,
and an appropriate subject for a limited-run kit.
The
Kit
Czech
Model's Yak-15 is a standard limited-run injection-molded kit, with two
sprues on which are found a total 30 parts. A True Details resin cockpit
with additional resin parts for the intake, front section and rear section
of the engine, as well as weighted main tires, is included, with two
super-clear Falcon vacuform canopies, and a very nice decal sheet providing
the necessary markings for the three aircraft detailed in the instructions,
as well as numbers sufficient to do other aircraft if the modeler is
so inclined. So far as quality is concerned, the surface detailing
of the injection molded parts is petitely-engraved,
while the True Details parts live up to TD's reputation. It you think
of this as an LTD kit with a better interior you will know what you
are dealing with.
Construction
The instructions are easily followed. After painting
and detailing the cockpit, I assembled it and set it aside. I then
took the fuselage halves off their sprue and cleaned them up, sanding
the central joint to thin the trailing edge of the vertical fin and
be sure of a good fit. There are no locating pins in this kit, which
is not a problem for anyone who has ever built a plastic kit. With
the fuselage parts ready, I inserted the cockpit and engine parts,
using cyanoacrylate glue to fasten them in place, then glued the fuselage
halves together with Ambroid ProWeld. I used rubber bands to hold everything
together while things set up as the interior provides a tight fit even
pre-fitted and sanded.
I then assembled the wings and sanded their butt
joints to provide proper dihedral, and did the same to the horizontal
stabilizers. Once the fuselage had set up, I glued wings and stabilizers
in position and put things aside to allow the joints to set. Once this
was done, I puttied all joints with that good old standby, Bondo auto
detailing putty, available at Pep Boys in large tubes for low prices,
and far less liable to shrinking and cracking than any other modeling
putty I have used. When this had dried overnight, I sanded all joints
smooth and rescribed the petitely-engraved lines where necessary.
Painting
I knew at the outset I was going to do the flight
demonstration team aircraft, since I love red airplanes (pun intended).
I sprayed a light coat of Tamiya flat white overall as a base coat,
did refilling of joints as necessary, re-sanded and re-shot the base
coat. Once
that was dry, I shot the airplane with Gunze-Sanyo H-86 "Red Madder" (whatever
that means), a bright scarlet gloss red. After it dried thoroughly
overnight, I shot three light coats of Future to give a high-gloss
finish.
Decals
The decals went on easily and snugged right down
with a bit of Micro-Sol. Once they were fully set and I had washed
off the model to get rid of any solution remaining on the surface,
I shot a final coat of Future.
Final
Assembly
I painted the landing gear and inside of gear doors
and gear wells with Model-Master non-buffing Aluminum (the gear wells
before painting the rest of the model), painted the tires and gave
them a light brushing of brown paint to simulate mud (Russian airfields
were still mostly grass until the Fifties) and bring out the nice detail
in the True Details wheels.
After assembling the gear, I cut the beautifully-clear vacuformed canopy
from its backing and attached it with white glue. The canopy is so
clear, I decided to keep it closed, since there is no problem looking
inside to see the cockpit detail and it keeps the sleekness of the
airplane's form. I used spare gun barrels from an Me-410, rather than
the kit-supplied items.
Overall
Assessment
If you have yet to build a limited-run injection-molded
kit, this simple model would be a good one to start with. The result
is a good-looking airplane, and a worthy inclusion in any collection,
particularly now that we are being given every version of Yak fighter
made, thanks to ICM, Accurate Miniatures, and Eduard.
Now then, if they would just make the Yak-23... |
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