Airfix Bf109 E4 1:72

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dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,166 posts

184 months

Tuesday 29th May 2012
quotequote all
So I bought a new Airfix kit. There, I admitted it. It's their latest Bf109 model, and cost me £4.99. I bought it becasue I wanted to see for myself how these latest Airfix kits build - to me the always looked crude, with particularly bad surface detail on the ones I've seen built up (notably the latest Spitfires, Sabres and Bf110). Am I biased against Airfix? Probably Yes, and No. I spent countless happy hours building Airfix kits as a child. I genuinely want them to produce world class kits.

I make no apology for having acquired a keen eye for detail over 35 years or so of modelling, which I apply as harshly to my own work as I do to kits I've paid hard earned cash for. So here we go:

Nice box art. I want this to be a good kit!



Sprues: The plastic is fairly soft, with a very light matt finish/texture, but opaque. Detail looks to be very good indeed - the cockpit has separate seat, instrument panel, gunsight (transparent) rudder pedals and control column. The rudder even has a represenation of the control wires leading to it. The engine detail is better than the equivalent Tamiya kit, but still pretty much a recangular blob. Personally I can't see the point, and would rather have had the engine cover moulded in-situ rather than having to fit it.



You can see on the wings some form of release fluid/oil which will need washing off before painting.



Sprue gates are extremely thick, and sometimes run onto the surfaces of the parts, which requires very careful work to contour back to shape. The gates are also heavily tapered, meaning you have to slice them with a blade - cutters get deflected into the part with disasterous results:



I can see some of the smaller parts being easily damaged when removed. Here you can also see a thin line of flash around the periphery of all the parts which needs removing with a knife, or sanding.

Transparent parts look OK:



Test fitting the fuselage halves went fine, although the panel lines don't appear to extend all the way around the mouldings as they should. Wing root detail on the stbd side of the fuselage is mising/mis-shapen, which is a shame. The lower engine cowling doesn't fit, and requires quite a bit of scraping and filing:



The wings don't fit either, with a pronounced step at the leading edge:



Cutting off the location pins soon cured that. The flaps can be positioned drooped, which is a nice touch, but again they don't fit properly without shortening their locating tabs. The under wing radiators need very careful fettling to fit in their recesses, but look good once fitted.

Tailplanes and engine cover seem to fit OK. That's as far as I got tonight.

So far - yes, I'm enjoying it. This isn't a kit that's going to fall together, and to get a decent result will require more work than the rather optimistic "skill level" of 1 on the box would suggest...

Edited by dr_gn on Tuesday 29th May 00:29

Zad

12,702 posts

236 months

Tuesday 29th May 2012
quotequote all
To be honest, it looks like the mould halves have been mis-aligned. That really should never have got through QA! Stuff like that should be pretty easy to catch, there is no excuse.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,166 posts

184 months

Tuesday 29th May 2012
quotequote all
Zad said:
To be honest, it looks like the mould halves have been mis-aligned. That really should never have got through QA! Stuff like that should be pretty easy to catch, there is no excuse.
I was going to say that I'd be willing to pay a couple of quid more for a state-of-the-art British kit, but I don't think the issue here is cost, it's poor engineering and attention to detail.

Anyway...onwards.

Eric Mc

122,032 posts

265 months

Tuesday 29th May 2012
quotequote all
I can kind of see where this is going.

I notice that the build is also being covered on Brit Modeller and it is interesting to see the comments and comparisons being made when matching the Airfix kit with the Tamiya one.

Even if the Airfix one has some faults - so does the Tamiya one. What kit is perfect?

I see that the retail price for the Tamiya is in the £10 to £12 bracket at the moment.
So, you pay £5.99 for an Airfix 109E with some faults or £10 to £12 for the Tamiya 109E with some faults.

Pays your money and takes your choice - as ever.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,166 posts

184 months

Tuesday 29th May 2012
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
I can kind of see where this is going.

I notice that the build is also being covered on Brit Modeller and it is interesting to see the comments and comparisons being made when matching the Airfix kit with the Tamiya one.

Even if the Airfix one has some faults - so does the Tamiya one. What kit is perfect?

I see that the retail price for the Tamiya is in the £10 to £12 bracket at the moment.
So, you pay £5.99 for an Airfix 109E with some faults or £10 to £12 for the Tamiya 109E with some faults.

Pays your money and takes your choice - as ever.
Please, stop making your own ending up! It'll go wherever it's destined to go...

I can't see I've been particulaly harsh about the kit so far, indeed, as I said I'm enjoying building it; details are excellent and it shows every sign of building into a very nice model. The problems so far are not insurmountable, but they are there. I've illustrated my observations with photographs - it's not as if I've made them up.

Not sure what your obsession with the Tamiya version is - this is not a comparison. Since you bring up the 'faults' with the Tamiya version, I'd love to know what they are: one hardened reviewer called it "the best kit he had ever built", another said "The kit goes together so well its not even worth discussing". Is that worth the extra £4? Probably, but who cares - this is about the Airfix version.

Personally I'm not particularly bothered by form errors unless they are blatantly wrong. I can't see a problem with this kit in that area. OK it doesn't match the Tamiya version apparently, but, so what?





Eric Mc

122,032 posts

265 months

Tuesday 29th May 2012
quotequote all
All I was saying was that no kit was perfect - even Tamiya ones.

It was the Britmodeller chaps who were comparing it to the Tamiya version anyway - because someone noticed some similarities. I've not seen the Tamiya model in the flesh so I can't really comment from personal experience.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,166 posts

184 months

Tuesday 29th May 2012
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
All I was saying was that no kit was perfect - even Tamiya ones.

It was the Britmodeller chaps who were comparing it to the Tamiya version anyway - because someone noticed some similarities. I've not seen the Tamiya model in the flesh so I can't really comment from personal experience.
I've not knowingly seen the Tamiya version in the flesh, never mind built it. It will probably be the benchmark, but I'd estimate the Airfix version will be close.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,166 posts

184 months

Wednesday 30th May 2012
quotequote all
Sooo another 3 or so hours of preparation work tonight.

I started by double checking the wing fitting issue. I thought today I must have made some kind of mistake yesteday while dry-fitting. I've cut the locator pins off already, so I measured the centres of the holes/stubs; they are definitely out. It was easily sorted and the fit is indeed spot on without the pins.

Here is the side-to-side issue with the wing root surface detail (the raised riveted strip fades away on the port side):



Here are some pictures of the cockpit (instrument panel not shown):



More than enough detail there for this scale, with the canopy closed at any rate.

Then I test fitted the pilot:





Somewhat confused, I read the instructions, and saw that to fit the pilot you first, bizarrely, have to cut the rudder pedals off:



This is Vintage Airfix hehe IIRC the last two Airfix kits I built (1950's era Sunderland and the 1990's Tucano) the pilots would. not. fit. This made me chuckle. I'll leave the pilot out.

All three tyres are pre-flatted, which is a nice touch, and the u/c legs have spigots which will hopefully assist in getting the distinctive Bf109 compound angle stance correct:



This is the engine:



Hopefully one day someone will produce a resin replacement - this would have the potential to look very impressive I think. Notice the exhaust stubs are separate strips fitted in a recess - this is good becasue it ensures an easily achieved sharp paint demarcation between the fuselage and the stubs.

I was putting off fettling of the smalled components until last - in fact I still havent finished them:



As you can see I broke the antenna already, and damaged a mass damper. Why these parts can't be fed from one end I don't know.

Final thing is this:



It's the head armour for the canopy. It doesn't appear anywhere in the instructions though as far as I can see. I'll leave it off.

Another enjoyable evening's work overall. No issues that would particularly trouble an experienced modeller, but skill level 1? This is an inexpensive kit presumably aimed at younger modellers, but I don't think this will be a simple kit to assemble well.

Edited by dr_gn on Wednesday 30th May 00:31

kenny Chim 4

1,604 posts

258 months

Wednesday 30th May 2012
quotequote all
Oi, dr_gn, what happened to the 1/24 Kouros Sauber C9 that you promised us?

I ask as I fancy modelling the Revell version with the running Michelin Man decals and hoped to pick up some tipsirked

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,166 posts

184 months

Wednesday 30th May 2012
quotequote all
kenny Chim 4 said:
Oi, dr_gn, what happened to the 1/24 Kouros Sauber C9 that you promised us?

I ask as I fancy modelling the Revell version with the running Michelin Man decals and hoped to pick up some tipsirked
The Sauber and the Porsche...I got modelling fatigue after the Jaguar, and I thought a simple OOB build of this Bf109 would be just the thing to get back into it.

kenny Chim 4

1,604 posts

258 months

Wednesday 30th May 2012
quotequote all
Apologies, I was only joking and realise you'll make a much better job of the C9 by not rushing into it!

Also, I don't wish to steer away from that Airfix kit but I was reading an article about a company called Trimaster and the German fighters they've produced. Did a quick Google and found this completed 1/48 FW 190: http://hsfeatures.com/features04/fw190a8r11mm_1.ht...

Not checked cost (probably expensive) but I like how this company provides open sections as part of the kit(s) and there's plenty of after market additions.

Best of luck with the BF109!

Eric Mc

122,032 posts

265 months

Wednesday 30th May 2012
quotequote all
Trimaster are linked to Dragon and Cyber Hobby.

Their kits were pretty much state of the art 20 odd years ago but they often had fit issues - and they were expensive at the time too.

kenny Chim 4

1,604 posts

258 months

Wednesday 30th May 2012
quotequote all
Yeah, that makes sense Eric as I guess a lot of their parts are created in resin and white metal- which is not only heavy, costly but also more difficult to match together.

I just liked what that modeller has done in the above link and didn't wish to take anything away from that Airfix kit.

Eric Mc

122,032 posts

265 months

Thursday 31st May 2012
quotequote all
Dragon (and Trimaster) kits can make up into fantastic models. At the moment though, the prices of the Cyber Hobby arm of the company are, in my opinion, outrageous. Which is a pity as they seem to have suddenly decided to look at classic UK aircraft as the basis for some of their rel;eases.

Just over a year agon they released a 1/72 Gloster Meteor III - at almost £30.00. It knocks spots off the old Airfix Meteor III - but custs around 5 times trhe price.
More recently they have released a 1/72 Sea Vixen (nearly £40.00) and a 1/72 Sea Venom £30.00). They are both state of the art 21st Century kits - but they have managed to get the Sea Vixen horrendously wrong shape wise. The nose is completely mishapen. Even the ancient FROG kit was more accurate - and that wasn't that great.
The MPM/Xtrakit Sea Vixens are more accurate but more difficuklt to build.

And guess who's Sea Vixen looks most like a Sea Vixen?

Airfix's.

Sadly for me, it's 1/48 and I don't build in that scale.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,166 posts

184 months

Saturday 2nd June 2012
quotequote all
Still building it, just painting the sub-assemblies. More pics tomorrow hopefully.

Despite this being specifically about the Airfix build, the question so far turning over in my mind is "How does this new Airfix version add to what's already been available for many years?"

Price? You can get the equivalent (and by all accounts pretty much perfect) Tamiya version for around £3-£4 more than the Airfix version, which unfortunately despite being brand new, is flawed.

OK, £4 is a significant percentage of the Airfix base price, but does anyone really care about £4 these days? It's the cost of a couple of tins of paint, of which you need 12 to complete this kit according to the instructions.

Onwards...

Edited by dr_gn on Saturday 2nd June 00:09

Eric Mc

122,032 posts

265 months

Saturday 2nd June 2012
quotequote all
You do know the Tamiya one is flawed too?

72twink

963 posts

242 months

Saturday 2nd June 2012
quotequote all
Just found this (too much time in the garage on the Sunbeam Lotus), I received one of these on Tuesday for my birthday and the couple of hours I spent fettling uncovered the same issues as you but as my yard stick for enjoyment is the "pint of beer" theory - a pint is £3.50 say - am I getting a pint and a halfs entertainment ....... Yes! Compare this to a FineMolds 109 which at £20 (yes still 1/72) has very weak cockpit sidewall detail and it becomes even more of a bargain.

I'm off to Britmodeller to bookmark your build over there, keep the updates coming Dr!

Eric Mc

122,032 posts

265 months

Saturday 2nd June 2012
quotequote all
My viewpoint too. I don't seek perfrection - just satisfaction.

I am currently building the ancient Airfix P-40 Kittyhawk. By modern standards, it is a dreadful little kit. But I'm still enjoying the build.

If I'd had my sensible head on I would have bought the Academy kit (which is the best around in 1/72) but this was an impulse buy and it'll look like a 112 Squadron P-40 when it's finished.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,166 posts

184 months

Saturday 2nd June 2012
quotequote all
72twink said:
Just found this (too much time in the garage on the Sunbeam Lotus), I received one of these on Tuesday for my birthday and the couple of hours I spent fettling uncovered the same issues as you but as my yard stick for enjoyment is the "pint of beer" theory - a pint is £3.50 say - am I getting a pint and a halfs entertainment ....... Yes! Compare this to a FineMolds 109 which at £20 (yes still 1/72) has very weak cockpit sidewall detail and it becomes even more of a bargain.

I'm off to Britmodeller to bookmark your build over there, keep the updates coming Dr!
It's not on Britmodeller - It's on Scale Plastic & Rail. I was asked to write a build review of the kit for them. I think it will be linked from their 'official' in box review.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,166 posts

184 months

Saturday 2nd June 2012
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
My viewpoint too. I don't seek perfrection - just satisfaction.

I am currently building the ancient Airfix P-40 Kittyhawk. By modern standards, it is a dreadful little kit. But I'm still enjoying the build.

If I'd had my sensible head on I would have bought the Academy kit (which is the best around in 1/72) but this was an impulse buy and it'll look like a 112 Squadron P-40 when it's finished.
I couldn'tagree more - satisfaction at having achieved the best you can with a model does not depend on the kit itself in any way.

What I can't accept is a great British name like Airfix (probably the strongest brand in plastic modelling full stop) producing second rate kits like this. I'm looking at these new Airfix kits from a manufacturing engineering perspective, and I find the obvious quality control issues totally unacceptable. This "it'll do" attitude is part of the reason British manufacturing is in the sthole it's currently in. We are not going to improve our situation by producing anything other tham the very best quality at the very best price.

Airfix are so close to achieving this with this kit that it hurts. The kit is engineered probably to 95% of what could reasonably be called perfect, and the last 5% seems to be missing due to someone accepting something that is clearly wrong, but failry easily fixable. They chose not to.

I am thoroughly enjoying building this model - I'd probably recommend it to the experienced modeller over the Tamiya kit, purely becasue it's British and the errors are fairly easy to correct. Maybe not for a beginner though.

I wondered whether to e-mail Airfix and ask what's going on, but I'm not sure they'd listen.

Anyway I should really leave the conclusion to the end, but all the above I believe is valid based on what I've seen so far.