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(2022 F-16 Group Build)Turkish F-16D


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G'day people,

 

I would like to join in and this will be my kit

 

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I have not built a Revell F-16 before so it will be interesting to see how it compares the the Hasegawa offerings. It looks very nice with more detail in general but for a relatively new kit there is a considerable amount of flash. As an example here are some engine exhaust parts

 

DSCN8713.JPG

 

The exhaust opening is almost completely closed over!

 

cheers,

 

Pappy

 

 

 

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G'day people,

 

I have made a very basic start today by doing what I like to call condensing. the kit comes with many parts that will not be utilised as this kit is based on Revell"s earlier PW engined F-16B kit while the kit subject in this boxing is a BLK 50 (GE engined) F-16D and includes an additional sprue for that purpose. In order to avoid confusion and eliminate the potential to add an incorrect part, these 'Not for use" items were removed from the sprue and added to zip-lock backs in their parts group i,e tail, inlet, weapons etc) and squirreled away into the spares bank. 

I then removed the remaining parts and stored them in a pill box. After an hour I was left with this

 

DSCN8711.JPG

 

That done I then started work on the various assembly groups. I tend to jump around the instructions as I find I can paint and assemble one group while another is drying.

First up, the cockpit tubs were cleaned up.

 

This kit will have aircrew installed, canopy down in-flight so I was not going to go crazy. I simply added a representation of the two air vents on the rear bulkhead of the front cockpit using some plastic sheet. The throttles were added (a nice if somewhat over scale touch) but I will leave the joysticks off until Iafter the seats have been added

 

DSCN8715.JPG

 

The Main Landing Gear (MLG) bay was also assembled. This is far superior to the old Hasegawa offering. A quick spray of white to see how it comes together. I was going to just leave it alone and add a wash but my AMS took over and I decided to add some wire to busy it up

 

 


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Since I was in the detailing mood, the seats were assembled and received some additional detail

 

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The back of the seat assembly was sheeted over as it was just an open section that did not look correct. Other details added include the tubing running from the emergency oxy down the seat side (and a similar line on the other side) but the area that really needs some help is the top of the headbox.

 

Early ACES II seats had fixed pitot probes that stuck out each side. The seats were later modified to ave retracted probes folded against the headbox sides. I cut off the kit probes and scratched up some replacement probes from stretched sprue. The final addition was to add some two-part epoxy putty to the top of the headbox sculpted to represent the canvas flaps of the parachute pack,

 

cheers,

 

Pappy

 

 

 

 

 

 

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G'day people,

 

Revell break down heir kit fuselage a little differently to their Has equivalent. They have opted to use a common rear upper and lower fuselage section with different forward sections to allow for the single and dual seat versions. The advantage here is that the wings are moulded integrally to the rear section  but the modeller is left with a potentially nasty seam to clean up. I would have preferred Hasegawa's approach which involves a completely new upper fuselage for one hole/two hole vipers as this eliminates a potentially nasty seam.

 

DSCN8718.JPG

 

I glued the fuselage parts carefully in stages as I found the forward part wanted to move around if left by itself during test fitting. It is a complex surface so I joined the left edge to the top centre and let it cure overnight. This let me get the two surfaces as flush as possible. The next day I used a couple of spots of CA to hold until the other side was in the correct position, then wen I was happy, a bead of CA was run in from the underside and zapped with some accelerator. A smear of liquid putty was applied over the top and allowed to dry then lightly rubbed back. The seam was pretty good and did not need any detail to be re-scribed - result!

 

The cannon port is supplied as a separate part as this item changed shape during the course o the jet's development and the F-16D features the later style. The kit part did not fit without some judicious sanding first and still required filling and sanding to blend in.

 

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Still on the body, I wanted a more dynamic appearance for my kit so used this opportunity to saw off the leading and trailing edge flaps which will be put aside until a later stage

 

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The intake has been assembled and required some filling and sanding of the upper (internal) and lower seams. As my kit will be posed in-flight I couldn't just cheat and add an intake cover so I had to do the work. The destructions would have you add the lower intake ramp/ Nose Wheel Well (NWW) during assembly but this can easily be added after the main parts are together which greatly eases the filling and sanding stage.

 

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Finally, the MLG has been painted and detailed.Much more could  be added but I find that detailing these areas involves a law of diminishing returns  and this would be enough for this build

 

DSCN8722.JPG

 

cheers,

 

Pappy

 

 

 

 

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  • Pappy121 changed the title to (2022 F-16 Group Build) Turkish F-16D
  • Pappy121 changed the title to (2022 F-16 Group Build)Turkish F-16D
12 hours ago, kurnass77 said:

Very interesting, especiall 'cause I've 5 RoG kit, of which two the same box you satrted building here; very useful tip of fit/construction.

keep up with the good work mate!

 

 

Gianni

 

G'day Gianni, glad this has piqued your interest, 1/72 builds generally get less attention.

 

G'day people,

 

The cockpit tubs have been painted. I opted not to use all the instrument panel decals as the supplied detail is very nice and looks good when carefully painted. I did use some decals for the centre pedestal as these are completely devoid of detail

 

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They look a little garish by comparison but with the aircrew in place and canopy down I don't think the effect will be that stark. 

The seats have now been painted up as well

 

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These are some of the nicest 1/72 ACES seats I have seen, especially for kit supplied seats. It would have been nice if all the seat belts were moulded on but with the aircrew in place this will not matter

 

The MLG has been added to the lower fuselage but the intake assembly is only dry fitted at this stage

 

 

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I don't think I will be able to paint the intake separately and just drop it in . the fit is good but still has a visible gap

 

Finally, the cockpit sill has been painted up. One thing that struck me was that the rear instrument coaming lacks the ASHM that my subject BLK 50 jet has and left unmodified the part is more representative of an F-16B. I used some scrap resin and copper wire to knock up a crude representation and some addition cabling was added before the whole lot received a coat of black

 

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cheers,

 

Pappy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Edited by Pappy121
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1 hour ago, Thadeus said:

Very nice work! I much prefer the Revell kit to Hasegawa, especially with the landing gear bays construction. Can't wait for some more progress!

 

G'day Thadeus, thanks very much.

 

I am a fan of the Has 1/72 F-16s (having built several of them) but I must agree this seems the better kit, but then again it should be as it is a significantly more recent tooling so it should be.

 

The Has kits still build into fine models but the panel lines seem finer and more accurate on the Revell kits and the u/c is a massive improvement.

 

The thing is, the Revell kit is considerably more expensive and closer in price to the Tamiya 1/72 F-16s (which I have not built), which in Oz is close to $60 vice the Has kit which can be around half that (or much less 2nd hand at swap meets) so that is something that needs to be factored in as  although better I do not think the kit is twice as good. The money saved can go towards AM at which point the advantage of the newer kit is less relevant. I have a Revell single seater I may also build if this one winds up quickly,

 

cheers,

 

Pappy

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G'day people,

 

The fuselage is together!

 

It went together okay but I found that the rear side portions did not marry up too well. Revell (and just about every other manufacturer) break down the fuselage into a horizontally split affair, but Revell have moulded the wings integrally with the upper rear fuselage so this is one less seam to deal with and also takes care of the wing anhedral issue nicely.

 

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Revell have chamferred the upper edges of the lower half and this part had a tendency to pinch inwards resulting in a small gap. If I were to build one of these again I would add a spreader or two within the fuselage to help push the sides out. The gap looks worse near the wing  root as I have cut away the flaps.If these had been left as moulded there would not have been a gap here so that part is clearly self-induced.

 

The join along the fuselage chine was very good. I brushed on some liquid putty and rubbed this back so just like the upper fuselage join, it looks worse than it actually is

 

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Likewise the IFF panel in front of the cockpit

 

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A brush of liquid putty was applied and rubbed back. The fit of the radome was a little uneven but it did not take much to blend into the fuselage profile. I used a razor saw to re-establish the seam. The fuselage join passes directly through the forward avionics bay panels but this just needed some gentle sanding to eliminate

 

cheers,

 

Pappy

 

 

 

 

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On 3/29/2022 at 6:15 AM, kurnass77 said:

Nice work! I like the scratche HUD repeater in the rear office!

 

Gianni

 

G'day Gianni,

 

Thanks very much. I just coul not let it go and since it will be visible thru that big canopy it seemed like  the right thing to do

 

On 3/31/2022 at 11:57 PM, Kurt H. said:

Great work, I really like the extra detail you added to the MLG bay, and cockpit. 

 

Welcome to the GB

 

G'day Kurt, thanks for the welcome

 

G'day people,

 

I spent today on the back end. Revell provide both the GE and PW engines with some very nicely rendered details for the turbine faces. Apart from the mahoosive amount of flash on the engine parts

 

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After cleaning that up, the next problem I had to deal with was painting the turbine face as it is quite deep within the exhaust section. My solution was to cut the end  off

 

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This is one area where the Hasegawa kits are a little easier as the turbine face is supplied as a separate item (but the depth of the exhaust is also comically too short)  which would have been the ideal way to engineer this part

 

Anyhoo, moving on, the exhaustn has had some basic colour applied in preparation for the weathering stages to follow

 

DSCN8749.JPG

 

cheers,

 

Pappy

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G'day people,

 

I was able to find some pictures of my subject display jet with an interesting asymmetrical load of inert AIM-9M, AIM-9X and ACMI along with a pair of jugs that received some artwork to match the jet.

 

I had a pleasant day today preparing the stores. The kit supplies a pair of very nice AIM-9L/Ms but I will only be using one. I was able to scrounge the AIM-9X from another kit and the AMI pod is a modified AIM-9 from the spares box. The kit decal sheet includes stores stencils and these all behaved exceedingly well. I used the spare AIM-9M stencils on the AIM-9X, not strictly correct but I won't tell if you don't

 

DSCN8758.JPG

 

The eagle eyed may have noticed that the AIM-9L/M CATM has had its rollerons removed. I have seen this on some jets and this was the case with my subject but it is not that common so it is another point of interest. Most of the CATMs I have seen usually have complete rear fins without rollerons.

 

cheers,

 

Pappy

 

 

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G'day people,

 

Getting closer to closing up. The kit supplied crew figures have been painted up. These are nicely sculpted for the most part with the torso including mask and hose details with a separate right arm. The left arm kind of disappears and is poorly defined and the head is also a bit too big proportionately with poorly defined details. I ended up sanding the head down a little and re-shaping. The details were the painted in by hand

 

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I used some spare decal placards to simulate the knee board checklist details

 

I found the HUD combiner glass a tight fit and it required some gentle sanding to thin is slightly in order to fit correctly

 

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The canopy is supplied clear so I tinted this with  a concoction comprised of various clear tints. I have seen various combinations of clear and tinted forward and aft canopy sections on two seat F-16s so it is always best to check refs. My display jet has both sections tinted

 

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A dry fit to confirm all the bits will play nice together

 

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Although very clear in the upper sections, I found the sides to have some distortion such that everything below the shoulder is practically invisible. The tops of the seats and crew helmets are very visible so it would pay to concentrate on these areas if you intend to have the lid down,

 

cheers,

 

Pappy

 

 

 

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G'day Thadeus,

 

Thanks very much. The canopy fits very well although as you say it is a bit thick in the sides which results in some distortion. I doubt this would be an issue with the canopy open.

 

G'day people,

 

I have managed to get the lid on

 

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As already mentioned, the canopy fit is excellent however although not immediately apparent from the pictures there is some distortion when looking directly through the side sections. The canopy was dipped in Future following tinting so this is not an opacity issue with the tinting but due to the thickness of the plastic.

 

One minor issue I discovered was that the instructions would have you install the canopy bridge part with the actuator receptacle facing forwards which is incorrect, it should actually face aft. This is easily achievable with an open canopy but with the lid down the actuator needs to have the extended section cut off. If the bridge is glued in the correct orientation, the remaining actuator part angles rearwards too much and looks wrong. I glued the bridge facing forwards instead. Given the distortion issues mentioned previously it is not really visible

 

The engine exhaust and intake assemblies have also been installed

 

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I cut off the kit orientation tab and aligned the exhaust by eye, it fit very well after ensuring both it and the fuselage were square

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There was a considerable amount of masking required to get the various colours characteristic of the -229 exhaust. There will be more required to preserve it during the painting process!

 

The intake is proving more problematic as although it fits, it does not fit well

 

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There is quite a large gap where the intake assembly meets the fuselage. This has been the worst fit I have experienced so far,

 

regards,

 

Pappy

 

 

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  • 1 month later...

yG'day people,

 

I am back home and finally got some bench time in on this one.

 

The join between the intake and lower fuselage had a slight step. It was not apparent when I test fitted these two assemblies but was definitely there once the glue had set. A quick brush of liquid putty and a rub back soon had things back on track

 

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Next the tedious task of masking off the canopy and 'zorst

 

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Just about ready for paint.

 

In the meantime, I thought that I would reward myself with some decal application starting with the fin. As this will be an airshow special, if this decal does not go down well, it is basically the end of this scheme. After painting the fin gloss black, the decals were applied. These consist of two main decals per side, one for the fin base and one for the upper section of the fin. The decals conformed beautifully although they did require several generous coats of setting solution. Once the decals were dry and suitably snuggled down, I used a brand new scalpel blade to 'shave' any excess film from the leading and trailing edges.

 

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A small decal is applied over the top of the upper fin decal for the Turkish flag and additional markings. I made sure the main fin decals were thoroughly dry and waited 48 hours before applying these decals.

 

The stabs were a relatively simple affair. Like the fin, the upper surfaces were sprayed gloss black as well but these only required application of a single decal. Unfortunately, I have manged to break of several of the small static discharge wicks with my fat fingers which will need to replaced. These are very fine and top marks to Revell for providing them in this scale

 

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The final job was the gasbags. The same paint prep was followed and the decals again performed flawlessly but these also needed a couple of coats of decal setting solution to snuggle down

 

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I am off again so it will be another while before the nest update,

 

cheers,

 

Pappy

 

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  • 4 weeks later...
  • 1 month later...
On 7/3/2022 at 7:15 AM, SERNAK said:

This is one of Revell's best kits!

 

G'day Sernak,

 

I agree, this one goes together really well.

 

G'day people, it has been a little while but managed to get back to the bench. I have added a nice turned brass pitot

 

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I will add the alpha probes when all the painting and weathering is done, they are tiny and will be too easy to lose during handling.

 

I have finished blocking out the main upper side colours to go under the decals

 

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A quick dry-fit just because

 

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cheers,

 

Pappy

 

 

 

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Enjoying the progress reports, but have a question: you stated the build will be "canopy down, in flight" yet you went the extra mile (kilometer?) in detailing the landing gear bays.  Will the completed kit be "in flight, gear down" ???

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