Tamiya's
1/48 Skyray As a Drone Controller
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A while ago I was
part of a thread on RMS discussing the Cutting Edge stencil decal
sheet for Tamiya's lovely new 1/48th
Douglas Skyray. While expressing my concerns over this sheet's
value for the money, I happened to mention that my chosen subject
was the drone controller aircraft featured on sheet 48-091. I subsequently
received several e-mails from people expressing an interest in
seeing the finished model. One, from Tom Cleaver at Internet Modeler,
suggested that I might like to say a few words about the model
and submit some photo's to them for publication. Here are those
few words (bear in mind the model was assembled and painted already
so there are no "in progress" shots as such.
Assembly
The model as seen is basically SFTB,
the only additions I added were some etched metal seat belts, otherwise
what you see is what you get! All interiors aft of the cockpit were sprayed
with Halfords white primer prior to assembly to speed up this part of
painting (the cockpit area was sprayed Halfords matt black and detail
painting was carried out with Humbrol paints). As an experiment, I first
painted the radarscope silver and then overcoated with Tamiya clear green
to see how it looked. Whilst the result is perhaps a little bright
and not completely accurate, it certainly looks good and catches
the eye. The model basically slipped together in the customary Tamiya
way. The only filler I used was a bead of Tippex along the upper
forward/rear fuselage join. The slots for the belly Sidewinder pylons
were filled with successive
coats of gap filling cyano (ZAP-A-GAP) and sanded and polished smooth
prior to rescribing the surface detail in this area. The windscreen
was glued in place with Tenax and masked. The main canopy was also
masked and this just popped into place for spraying. Time to start
waving the airbrush at the model!
Painting
This is where it gets interesting. Two of the three
main colours in this a/c are notoriously translucent and difficult to
spray. At the time I commenced spraying, I had yet to receive my tin
of Extracolor Insignia Yellow and so was forced to use the (matt) Humbrol
equivalent, not perfect but it would have to do! The light grey plastic
of the kit had led me to think I could get away with no primer coat of
white prior to applying the yellow. Big mistake! In the end the wings
required some 6-7 coats of yellow to achieve an acceptably opaque yellow.
The tail, although being red/orange was also sprayed yellow to ensure
uniformity with the wing stripes when sprayed. Take this as a warning...always
undercoat with white prior to spraying yellow (or red), it saves
a lot of heartache (to give you an idea the white undercoated drop
tanks required
two very thin coats of yellow to achieve a beautifully smooth finish).
With the yellow rubbed smooth with a piece of Scotchbrite, I masked
for the application of the red/orange tail and wing stripes. This
colour is stated as being FS18913 and was obtained from Extracolour
(X161), it turned out to be a fluorescent blaze orange, I always
assumed that this colour was far redder but in the end I bowed to
greater minds than mine and on it went! Luckily when applied over
the yellow (the reason for having sprayed the tail as well) it went
a bit redder and darker and looked very good to me. Over the yellow
it only needed a couple of thin coats to cover well. The masking
was removed and more rubbing down with Scotchbrite was done to smooth
the finish. Finally the last major masking operation was carried
out for the application of the engine grey to the fuselage and tail
tip. Again Humbrol was used (number 32) for this and when dry, I
rubbed down before I removed the masking.
The final bit of spraying
with the airbrush was to the inside of the slats - these were painted
with Insignia Red. With this done the model received several coats
of Halfords clear lacquer to give a smooth hard finish. Having got
the main colours on the a/c the next step was to mask and spray the
minor details (nose cone/leading edges) prior to decal application.
All of my masking is done using Tamiya tape. Whilst the nose cone
and anti-glare panel were sprayed with Tamiya Gloss Black, I chose
to hand paint the leading edges with Humbrol Chrome Silver. The
result was not as perfect as I would have liked but the masking of
these areas is a nightmare believe me! Tom Cleaver assures me that
it is entirely possible to work silver decal film around the leading
edge fences so I may be tempted to take this route on my next Skyray.
The very last job before decals was to mask and spray the tailcone.
I had masked the tailcone off prior to spraying the rest of the model
in order to keep the plastic "virgin" for the metal paint.
This masking was now removed and the area around the tailcone masked.
The colour I used for the tailcone was Humbrol Metalcote "polished
steel". The area was given a good coat of this and allowed to
dry for a half-hour or so before buffing up with a duster. The effect
this paint gives is superb but be warned it is fragile so handle
with care.
Decals
The decals for this kit were from Cutting Edge
sheets 48-091 & 48-092.
I ordered sheet 48-091 specifically for the drone controller but
had I known just how few decals this involved I would have been tempted
to make the scheme up from my spares
box! Aside from the Bureau Numbers in white, all the decals for this
scheme are basic black numbers and letters. Stencils and national
insignia came from 48-092 and all bedded down beautifully with Super
Set and Super Sol. The intake warning decals are an awful fit and
needed cutting and copious amounts of Super Sol to go down well,
even then I basically painted over most of the decal when dry with
Humbrol No19, which is fortunately almost an exact match once dry.
The black walkway decals also needed a little touching up once dry
in order to make them reach far enough forward (matching the black
was not a problem!). All other decals went on fine but be aware that
the NATC logos go over the rudder hinge line and will need cutting
along this line and an extra application of Micro Sol to bed them
down well. There really is very little else to add to this as the
scheme (at least decals wise)is so basic.
Finishing
With the decals dry, the model was washed with warm
soapy water to remove setting solutions and decal glue and allowed to
dry. The decals were then sealed
with a coat of Johnsons Klear applied with a wide flat brush.
Time to weather. I had decided that this model would be fairly clean
and represent a used but not shabby aircraft. To this end I ran some
burnt umber oil paint around the panel lines and wiped the excess
off after around 15 minutes with a tissue moistened in white spirit
(the multiple lacquer coats and Klear protect the paint finish).
The panel lines on the grey fuselage were done bit they are a little
too dark to show any effect really. This aside the only weathering
would be a little airbrushing around vents and the like after varnishing.
For the varnish I used a 50-50 mix of Aeromaster acrylic flat and
satin varnish. This gives a slightly shiny but not quite semi-gloss
finish that I like very much and looks the part to me.
Final Assembly
With the varnish in place
and dry final assembly and detail painting could take place. The
canopy was popped off and all masking removed prior to inserting
the ejector seat and internal canopy structure. My canopy is currently
not glued
but just sits in the open position. If I find details of the raising
mechanism, I may add detail later. Tail bumper and arrestor hook
were white glued in place and then the undercarriage and doors were
glued in place with Zap-a-Gap. With this done the model is more or
less done, the only other things were a little touching up some areas
and to add the navigation lights (for this I painted the areas with
silver and when dry overcoated with clear green and red). Thats
it. Done!
Conclusion
This is overall a great model of a fascinating aircraft - easy
to assemble and with some great colour scheme possibilities. The drone
controller has become at one fell swoop the brightest model in
my collection! Were I to do the model again there are a couple of things
I would do differently:
-
I would attempt to add some intake trunking
-this is more obtrusive than I expected on the finished model and
was a bit of a disappointment to me.I would definitely give the
model a white undercoat before commencing painting of the yellow.
This was a major pain to paint with out the undercoat! I would
wait for the Extracolours to turn up and not use matt colours for
a scheme like this in future. Although the fluorescent red/orange
was a match for the colour in my FS595A book I still think it doesnt look
quite red enough. I would perhaps add a drop of red to my next drone
controller (Im thinking Crusader!) and I would also possibly
lighten the engine grey just a little.
-
And finally I think I would attempt to
use silver decal for those B**%$!!£y leading edges! Just
goes to show that you always learn something with every model!
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