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The moment I
laid eyes on this kit I knew I had to have it. I like planes and helicopters to
be very distinctive, and that can certainly be said for this aircraft, there
haven't been many asymmetrical airplanes in history. Design on the BV 141
started in 1937, and the first three prototypes were created. After that, only a
handful were built. This model represents the B version, with the offset
tailplane. This version was equipped with two fixed 7.9mm machine guns and
can carry four 110lb bombs. The kit comes with decals for two versions, although
like many kits it's lacking the swastikas on the tail. plane if you want.
The kit
The kit comes together quite easily,
with little problems where the fit is concerned. Where the wings meet the
fuselage you need a little filler, but that's normal from what I've seen so far.
Also the canopy over the gunners didn't fit completely, I used some paint to
fill the gap. There's also a ladder the gunners/pilots used to climb aboard, but
I decided to leave that off. The engine cowl fit nicely on the fuselage,
so I put it on during the painting process, after which it was removed again and
the propellor/engine was bilt into it. After all the painting and decaling was
done, the last bits and pieces (landing gear/bombs) were glued in place.
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Painting
When the
time came to paint, I decided to stick with the instructions Airfix provided
because I couldn't find much on the internet. I usually try to stick to the
Model Master enamels, and the Humbrol 65 (Matt Aircraft Blue) suggested for the
underside was replaced with MM 1562 (Flat Light Blue). Looking back on the
finished model, I probably should have discarded that suggestion and gone with
something greenish. The blue makes a nice camo against the sky, but something
doesn't feel right. Airfix suggests Humbrol 30 (Matt Dark Green) and 91 (Matt
Black Green) for the camo scheme for the upper surfaces. The Humbrol 30 was
replaced with MM 1710 (Dark Green), and after masking off the undersurface the
upper surfaces were airbrushed. After that, the camo scheme was masked off,
roughly following the paint guide. I couldn't find a suitable MM color to
replace the Humbrol 91 with, so I went with Revell 67. A few drops of white were
added. After removing all the maskingtape, the machineguns were glued in place
as well as the canopies. I didn't dare mask those off, so I brishpainted them by
hand.
Decals
The decals provided are beautiful.
They are thin, come off the backing paper very easily, and show little to no
silvering at all. The only problems I had were that the decals would fold over
on each other, and it took a lot of effort to unfold them. Second problem were
the two crosses at the bottom: the decals are cut nicely around the wheel wells,
but fall over a large bulge on the wing surface, and I could not get the decals
to fit smoothly around them. In the end I gave up, made a paint mask from normal
printer paper, and painted them on, black first, white later. It looks good I
think. The swastika's came from a swastika sheet by AeroMaster, and they were my
first attempt at placing two decals on top of each other. Because of the thin
white line around the black center, it took some effort, but in the end it all
worked out.
Conclusion
I found this a very enjoyable build.
Not too many problems, and a model that will jump right at you between lots of
other models on the shelf. For a 6th model, I think I did pretty wel, and I hope
to be back soon with some more reviews.
Patrick
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