Tamiya 1:72 Kawasaki Ki-61 “Hien”

Tamiya 1:72 Kawasaki Ki-61 “Hien”

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dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,145 posts

184 months

Sunday 30th August 2020
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Every time I go on holiday and end up at an aircraft museum, I get inspired to build model aircraft again. Last week was no exception, so despite having a couple of (non aircraft) kits on the go already, I raided the stash and got out an Airfix Swordfish, and this Tamiya Ki-61:



As with the Tamiya Zero I built recently, this new-tool kit is astonishingly good. Surface detail is second to none:





Transparent parts are crystal clear:



And the fit of the parts can only be described as perfect; these assemblies were just dropped into place dry as a test-fit:













Some of the cockpit components approach resin in terms of fidelity:



And despite the levels of detail, it’s not a complicated kit: there are only 50 parts:



I’ve never built a Ki-61 before, but always fancied having one after seeing the old Revell box art when I was a little kid:



I want to finish it in that scheme, so I got the Tamiya mottle decals as well:



The Ki-61 was one of the few non-radial engined Japanese fighters of WW2, using a license built version of the Daimler-Benz DB-601. It will go nicely with my Airfix Bf-109 E4, and Italeri Macchi 202, both of which used similar DB-601 or derivative engines.

tangerine_sedge

4,760 posts

218 months

Sunday 30th August 2020
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Is there a reason why the top of the fuselage is part of the rear cockpit and not molded to the fuselage sides? It looks odd and more complicated than necessary. My only thoughts are that there are options to enable an open canopy or a limitation to the slide mold?

Edited to add : it looks like a great kit though smile

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,145 posts

184 months

Sunday 30th August 2020
quotequote all
tangerine_sedge said:
Is there a reason why the top of the fuselage is part of the rear cockpit and not molded to the fuselage sides? It looks odd and more complicated than necessary. My only thoughts are that there are options to enable an open canopy or a limitation to the slide mold?

Edited to add : it looks like a great kit though smile
It's to replicate the panel line detail on the actual aircraft, without needing filler. So the 'spine' part gives the smooth profile along the top, with the panel line joints slightly further round. Then it abrubtly changes to a top joint towards the tail. If Tamiya Extra Thin cement is used, it will result in excactly the right joint details in that area. It wouldn't really work on a kit with less than perfect joints between parts though.

BTW, there isn't an open canopy option in the kit.

tangerine_sedge

4,760 posts

218 months

Monday 31st August 2020
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dr_gn said:
It's to replicate the panel line detail on the actual aircraft, without needing filler. So the 'spine' part gives the smooth profile along the top, with the panel line joints slightly further round. Then it abrubtly changes to a top joint towards the tail. If Tamiya Extra Thin cement is used, it will result in excactly the right joint details in that area. It wouldn't really work on a kit with less than perfect joints between parts though.

BTW, there isn't an open canopy option in the kit.
Ah! That makes sense! I'm looking forward to seeing the mottle decals going on!

generationx

6,712 posts

105 months

Monday 31st August 2020
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You've got to love Tamiya quality. Those decals look like a really nice solution to a paint job that would have me sweating!

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,145 posts

184 months

Monday 31st August 2020
quotequote all
generationx said:
You've got to love Tamiya quality. Those decals look like a really nice solution to a paint job that would have me sweating!
There’s a Youtube video of someone airbrushing it freehand. But...no thanks.

robemcdonald

8,765 posts

196 months

Monday 31st August 2020
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I airbrushed my 48 scale one. Not as good as the decals obviously..

generationx

6,712 posts

105 months

Monday 31st August 2020
quotequote all
robemcdonald said:
I airbrushed my 48 scale one. Not as good as the decals obviously..
You do yourself a disservice sir.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,145 posts

184 months

Monday 31st August 2020
quotequote all
robemcdonald said:
I airbrushed my 48 scale one. Not as good as the decals obviously..
It looks great - the camo was sprayed by hand in reality, and wasn’t very consistent. The decals replicate that, but to be honest they look a bit like bad airbrushing.

Evangelion

7,708 posts

178 months

Saturday 5th September 2020
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I wouldn't bother with the decals, as I'm quite looking forward to hand spraying the mottle pattern. all good practice!

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,145 posts

184 months

Saturday 5th September 2020
quotequote all
Evangelion said:
I wouldn't bother with the decals, as I'm quite looking forward to hand spraying the mottle pattern. all good practice!
Thing about practice it you get it wrong a lot, and I’d rather not practice on a Tamiya kit! Large decals on surfaces with compound curves and especially with a lot of surface features aren’t always easy to apply either. These are supplied as complete fuselage sides and complete wing surfaces.

I’ll be masking and spraying the yellow wing stripes and propeller tips though - they’re also supplied as decals.

Evangelion

7,708 posts

178 months

Saturday 5th September 2020
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dr_gn said:
Thing about practice is you get it wrong a lot, and I’d rather not practise on a Tamiya kit!
Don't worry, I'll be practising on something cheaper first! (Got a few Hobby Bosses in the stash.)

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,145 posts

184 months

Sunday 6th September 2020
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That’s most of the preliminary painting done:





Everything has been given a thin coat of Klear to protect the paint. Next step is to apply some washes and weathering powders.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,145 posts

184 months

Sunday 13th September 2020
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I applied a dark wash and some powders to highlight the moulded detail. I also added some p/e lap belts to replace the decal - they always look a bit naff:









I suppose I could have done more work on the cockpit, but once the canopy is in place, any finer detail would be pretty much invisible. The Zero had more cockpit parts, but had an open canopy option. I think Tamiya got the level of detail right for this one:




dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,145 posts

184 months

Saturday 19th September 2020
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Added some lead wire for the brake lines:





And got the fuselage closed. A bit of surfacer was needed under the fuselage, and I also put some in front of the windscreen before realising there should in fact be a panel line there...


dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,145 posts

184 months

Sunday 20th September 2020
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Re-scribed the lower fuselage panel lines lost due to flatting the surfacer. And reinstated the upper fuselage ones:





Also added the six fasteners shown on the plans, but not present in the model:



And got the cockpit assembly, wing, tailplanes and gun cover fitted:



and made a start on painting the tail wheel:


CanAm

9,178 posts

272 months

Sunday 20th September 2020
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dr_gn said:
made a start on painting the tail wheel:

How the hell do you paint such small parts so neatly?

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,145 posts

184 months

Sunday 20th September 2020
quotequote all
CanAm said:
dr_gn said:
made a start on painting the tail wheel:

How the hell do you paint such small parts so neatly?
Magnifying glasses and a decent brush!

CanAm

9,178 posts

272 months

Sunday 20th September 2020
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dr_gn said:
Magnifying glasses and a decent brush!
And a VERY steady hand, no doubt!

snowen250

1,090 posts

183 months

Monday 21st September 2020
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I built one of these and used the mottle decals. They behaved very, very well. Even over the curves and lumps etc.

Simon