1/48th Great Wall Hobby FW-189 A1 Build.
Part IV – Getting better every day… sealing the deal and ready to
paint.
Focke Wulf Fw189A-1 “Nachtjäger”
Styrene Parts: 182 (grey and clear) on 6 sprues
32 P/E parts on one sheet
Canopy masks + Decals for one aircraft
I used my two hands to hold as many joints as possible while sealing the parts for the aircraft gluing it from one side to the other around the kit in order, but you have to be very good to hold everything at once – I am not that good! Of course now I grabbed out the clamps and the upper glue to fix together many of the parts, I use superglue for filler especially on wing seams because it can be sanded down to a smooth finish and also it has the bonus of holding the wing together.
There are several steps before you can do this – installing
the radar – masking the canopies, decaling the instrument panels and building
and installing the armament – let’s get on with the masking first.
The sheet above and
easy placement below - you will be left with some extra masks – don’t panic
like I did and go foraging in the carpet for lost transparencies!!
Before Masked up the canopies I dip all of the clear parts
in future floor polish after removing them from the sprues – this make them
super shiny and also adds a protective coating to them – I have had them all
stored in a little compartment “thingy” box I got a the newsagent that keeps
them all separated and undamaged while off their sprues – before this container
I had them wrapped in a soft cloth – it was however like handling eggs I was
never sure if I was crushing them. So this system is MUCH better.
Handily for us the masking sheet is provided – numbered so
as to easily work out which sheet goes on which mask - or vice versa) – a lot
of reports have come in about the decidedly “un-sticky” nature of these masks
I jumped in there – largest bit first the front canopy – and
of course the largest masking pain of window – this fitted just fine and stuck
ok – I thought it was going to fly off from what I have heard before in
reviews!The masking of these panels took about three hours – I know because while I was doing them I sat thru a really depressing documentary about an asteroid hitting the earth “When we least expect it – maybe tomorrow” and two episodes of the priceless “so bad it’s good” program “Deadliest Warrior” – the episode I liked especially was “Pol Pot against Saddam Hussein”
Why I mention this is because before I started this was a
bit apprehension about the canopy masking process on probably the MOST
glass-ridden aircraft ever – it was really a piece of cack and quite relaxing.
There were four parts I did replace with Tamiya masking tape – these are on
quite a bendy part of the back of the glasshouse near the rear gunner –
otherwise it was not half as stressful as I thought it was going to be.
The FuG212 C-1 radar is represented in plastic here and I
did think it looked a bit thick – but once off sprues and then glued together
it looks very convincing.
The pictures of this radar I have show the control box quite
well and it looks good installed in the glass nose – a good thing to do is to
put the stem for the radar inside the vertical slot without gluing before you
install the tiny antennae on the radar or you could put them on facing
horizontal instead of vertically. Once
dried take the stem out – put it thru the hole you have made in the mask in
that portion of the nose and connect it to the ‘scopes inside by the stem and
all was good.
The cockpit instrument panel has to go inside the canopy
before I can seal it all up – I couldn’t find a lot of detail in English about
the order of the dials but my limited German (helped along by Mr Google) helped
me realize in order from left to right what the dials were. I found these two
diagrams explaining what goes where...
9. Fahrtmesser – airspeed
8. Höhenmesser - altimeter
7. Variometer – Variometer/rate of climb indicator
6. Wendezeiger – Turn indicator
5. Horizont – horizon (c’mon we all can get that one)
4. Seitentrimm – schalter – Side Trim Switch
3. Anzeigegerät f. funknavigation - Display device f.
radionavigation
2. Führertochterkompass – secondary or repeater compass
1. Doppelladedruckmesser - double-loaded pressure gauge
I ended up using the kit decals for the instruments as the
replacements ones did not fit – obviously the instrument panel on this aircraft
is pretty small!
A little micro set and sol and they went down like they were
sewed on! With a special dispenser I wrangled with a needle tip to apply the
future I dabbed a bit on the dials to make a glassy shine where it should be.
And all was good
The upward firing cannon sits in a ring fairing but is pretty hard to mask with all of the painting - although i did attach it i later took the ring (and the wheels ) off the plane to aid handling and painting. I also gave this cannon a better paint job than this - it looks a bit rough here.
The rear MG 15 was glued with its frame on to the canopy ring. The canopy ring is frail but holds on ok once the canopy holds it in there.
The rear MG 15 was glued with its frame on to the canopy ring. The canopy ring is frail but holds on ok once the canopy holds it in there.
The rear canopy glass house parts went in pretty easily
after the internals were all finalised. The last two parts needed a small
sanding on both sides because as you see from this picture it was a little wide
– probably 1MM but enough to halt “production” for a tea break and a think!
Above shows how it needed "a'sandin" - below after the elbow grease... It fits nicely
Above shows how it needed "a'sandin" - below after the elbow grease... It fits nicely
Once this was sorted I used watchmakers glue to seal it all
in there. I was able to cheat a bit with the tiniest bit of Tamiya extra thin
“hot” glue – this really is playing with fire though and its waiting to get
punished with a “frosted” canopy, so try only to use the White glue or clear to
seal it all up.
Speaking of a plethora of clear parts – the wingtips are
moulded in clear plastic as well – well I know why – but it’s an odd choice –
one would be tempted to make them as an extension of the wingtips as normal and
add a small clear part for the navigation light. I do see the smart pat of this
though. Before I have been the victim of a “squashed wingtip from using too hot
of a glue and trying to clamp them together – in this instance just add the
clear part to the wing outer edge and mask the small dot off with masking fluid
– blu-tack or anything else you have to hand – a novel if not unusual way of
doing things – I see the merit in it.
On to the penultimate part of sealing this up - I got the
nifty little instrument panel and secured it into the lugs provided in the
front glasshouse section. This fits perfectly and the front glass then goes
onto the fuselage – taking care to not let the Radar panel hit your pilot’s
foot pedals it all secures in quite well.
I took the cannon and the mounting out so I could pack that
hole with foam to seal up the bird cage prior to undercoat – I left off the two
doors either side of the cockpit as well as I had decided to paint them separately
and add them later (they are going to be posed open) – the tiny glasshouse is
too fragile to risk losing anything or even breaking it. I used foam to fill up
the holes in the openings I left – this doesn’t damage the inside as long as
you don’t try to pack too much in – a great solution to how to temporarily fill
space.
It's like someone shot off a carton of expanding foam inside!
The next part was to paint on the insides of the cockpit
glass RLM 66 – I took the Vallejo model air for ease of use and gave all of the
cockpit areas a good going over – this was made a longer job by some of the
canopy masks flying off when the airbrush air hit them! Anyway after hunting
them down and re-sticking everything down I got that out of the way quickly.
The undercoat – well I needed something strong. I had sworn
off using neat – out of the rattle can undercoat but am yet to find one which
applies easily and does not separate from the kit when masking later or when
the going gets a little tough. I used some of the Plastic grey primer from
Halfords (a car repair store here in the UK) I am sure you could use any thin
undercoat meant for plastic – and this was my choice – with a little thinner
mixed in I gave the kit a going over once or twice.
I found some gap issues with the light overall colour
showing them up – back to the sanding board! – The fun and games never finish
in modelling; a few small sanding fixes and I can get onto the real camouflage of
the aircraft – but that is for the next instalment!!
Next time we will
paint and finish the aircraft – and try our hand at a little diorama making in
1/48th!