The Kit
The Owl 1/144 JB-2 consists of six pieces of resin for the missile; thirteen pieces of resin for the transport trailer; and a photoetch set with five pieces of brass. There are decals for four different Loons:
- JB-2, "Wendover Willie" in overall Olive Drab
- JB-2, 1946, USAAF overall in Olive Drab with white wing-tips
- JB-2, 1948, USAAF, that had a white body, wings and stabs with a red-tip nose and rudder, while the engine was olive drab with a red front
- LTV-N-2, May 1949, USS Carbonero that was overall yellow (some of the yellow was painted over red) with a red engine, rudder and rear-fuselage stripe
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Not too many kits are this easy to assemble. Glue the wings and stabs to the main body, then after you decide which photoetch intake to add to the engine, glue that to the body. And now you have a 1/144 Loon. Actually, you may want to hold off gluing the engine on until after painting, assuming the fit is decent enough (except maybe on the first examples, since they were Olive overall). I would definitely wait until after painting before gluing on the very small prop on the nose. If you plan on using the trailer, then I would paint all pieces first, glue it all together, then do touch-ups after assembly. It would be too small to assemble first then try to cover it all in a wood paint.
Comparison
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Conclusion
There are lots of possibilities one can accomplish using this kit. Using photographs of the ground-launching of JB-2s in the US you can construct a small vignette showing that using the Owl 1/144 JB-2. You can also construct a small display showing how the US Navy equivalent looked like on the subs that launched her – the USS Cusk and the USS Carbonero. If you're feeling really ambitious, you could build a B-17 or B-29 and hang the JB-2 underneath one of those aircraft's wings. Or you can just assemble the "transport trailer" and put the finished Loon on that. You're only limited by the pictures you can find that the amount of imagination employed.
Huge thanks to Owl for the review Loon.

