The
Hornet was a development on the lines of the Mosquito but to smaller
proportions and it served with the RAF from 1946 to 1955 it was also
developed for the Royal Navy as the Sea Hornet and is the subject of a
this Dynavector release.The kit comes as two vacuformed sheets with finely
moulded main components plus a bag of white metal parts
which include the undercarriage, props and spinners, cockpit details,
radiators and rockets plus many other tiny pieces. Two canopies are
supplied for those who make a mistake and a decal sheet covering two F20
machines and one F21, the instruction sheet seems pretty basic but all you
need to know is there, of course you must be a fairly experienced modeller
to have bought one of these kits as they are not for first timers. |
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Construction Notes
I feel there is no need to go into removal of components from the sheets again
here as you may well be acquainted with my methods and an equally good
description is on the instruction sheets with diagrams. As mentioned there are
two versions included so you need to make up your mind early which to do as you
need to cut the long nose off the F21 and use the short replacement provided.
After making up the pilots cockpit, the observers station and painting the
interior of the fuselage around the cockpit areas I added the stiffener as
recommended and some tiny 20thou plasticard tabs along the edges of each half of
the fuselage, arranged so that they interlaced, at the same time I cleared the
holes for the tailplane support and cut out the tailwheel bay area. As I
intended to use the cannon nose I lightly scored the area to be removed but did
not detach it until the fuselage was hardened off, all the bits were mounted
inside and the halves cemented and taped up until hard, a point to note here,
never tape up before cementing as the cement can easily creep under or along the
tape and ruin your surface undetected.
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Whilst
waiting I had a dry run with the engine nacelles and wings which seemed
perfect but I found later that the Radiators were a tight fit at 3mm back
from the lip. The wing stiffeners were added, heeding the warning about
the choice of cement, and I adjusted the wing so the intake lips were
parallel then slid the radiator in from the side as close to the front as
possible and superglued it at the same time checking to see the
appropriatenacelle half was
a good fit.
The exhaust holes were left intact on the nacelles and
the holders (retaining trays) discarded, a few small tabs were cemented in
and then I taped each nacelle up tight so I could get the centre hole
correct for the prop shaft, this was drilled and filed for a tight fit.
When satisfied the tape was removed and the halves cemented together,
later the gear doors were removed and I cut a small disc of 40thou card to
backup the inside of the nacelle front which is a bit weak,
the hole for the shaft was drilled and the shaft inserted and fixed with
superglue, when finally fitted to the wing I found that I needed a tiny
bit of filler by the radiator air intake but this was the only filler I
used. The exhausts shrouds were added and the exhaust themselves added
after painting. |
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By now I decided not to
remove the lower gun bay area and so I added the tailplanes at this time also
when the joins were cleaned up the wings were added taking great care to get the
dihedral correct, I do this by mounting the fuselage on a mound of blutac and
checking the fin is vertical with a set square, the wings are then propped up
until the ends are equally at the correct height, leave over night and all
should be well.
The remainder of the work was as
per instructions and quite easy then after checking all the joints I was ready
to spray, I chose the camouflage scheme and sprayed the nose radome first
of all with Revell satin black which was then masked off. The extra dark sea
grey was done first as this was the easiest area to mask up when dry, I now
sprayed the Sky areas. The whole model was dusted with a couple of coats of
Johnson’s Klear to seal it before adding the decals, not too many of those on
this aircraft, then another coat of Klear went on and all the remaining parts
were added. A final flat coat brought the finish back to a soft sheen and then
the canopies were unmasked, it was finished except for the tiny dorsal aerial
which I made from yellow stretched sprue.
A beautiful little model that I
am quite proud of.
Ted
Editors note:
Drop by Ted's
Website to see more of his models. Ted
Taylor's Modelworks
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