F-5A Freedom Fighter
by Dr. Menelaos Skourtopoulos
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F-5A Freedom Fighter |
Magic Five!
A conversion of Revell's 1/32
Scale F-5E
into an F-5A Freedom Fighter
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The F-5 Freedom Fighter has
been produced in many different versions (F-5 A/B/ RF-5A and T-38) and has
flown with air forces all over the world. The Royal Hellenic Air Force
(Greece) received its first F-5As in June 1965 and was the first NATO
country to flown the Freedom Fighter.
In March 2001 the F-5 story
was over and the last Squadron (343 TFS) was disbanded at Mikra AB.
Building an
F-5A in 1/32 Scale
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F-5A vs. F-5E
Differences
I always want to build a
F-5A in 1/32 scale but there’s no such a kit out there. So I decided to
convert the Revell F-5E Tiger in 1/32 scale.
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Well, at the look it sounded
easy, but it came to be a little nightmare after I started with it! The
are many differences between the two versions:
-
the length (The F-5E is
14.58m long, while the F-5A is 14.38m long);
-
the wingspan (8.13m for the
F-5E versus 7.7m for the F-5A);
-
the fuselage has a
different shape;
-
the cockpit layout (The
F-5A has no radar);
-
the ejection seat (The F-5A
uses the MB Mk 10L);
-
the nose landing gear is
different; and
-
the fuselage pylon is
bigger.
The Cockpit
I began with the cockpit
region.
As I mentioned above the
Freedom Fighter has no radar and almost the entire central upper region of
the instrument panel had to be changed. I just cut it off and made the
whole thing from scratch. I used some photo-etched instruments for the
central region, and the rest is from the kit. I sanded the original piece
and glued it on the new surface, with the result seen in the photos.
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The sidewalls are missing
from the kit and they made from plastic sheet from Evergreen.
The next problem is the
ejection seat. Most of the Hellenic Air Force F-5’s have their seats
upgraded to the Mk 10L version, which is very different than that in the
Revell F-5E kit. I solved the problem by converting the Mk 10 seat from
Revell’s 1/32 Tornado kit, and it turned out very well. (I ordered those
pieces from the X-Abt. in Bünde Germany; Thanks Guys!)
The Upper Fuselage & Wings
With the cockpit done, it’s
time for the fuselage where the real nightmare begins!
I used the F-5A kit in 1/48
scale kit from Testor as a template. I scaled one half of the fuselage and
the wing up to the 1/32 scale and used those drawings to create the new
fuselage. I made a skeleton frame from Evergreen sheet styrene and then
covered it with putty. Once that had dried I shaped it with files and
sandpaper and scribed in the details.
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Click the thumbnails below to view larger
images:
While working on the
fuselage I also changed the wing, which differed in the wingspan as well
as having a smaller LEX.
The Lower Fuselage & Undercarriage
The upper fuselage of the
F-5E has a Coke bottle shape, but below the wings it is straight. On the
F-5A both the upper and lower sections of the fuselage have that Coke
bottle shape, which means that I had to form the underside section to look
the same as the upper fuselage.
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The airbrakes also have to
be changed as well as the whole undercarriage region. Fortunately the
undercarriage itself is almost the same between the two versions.
The 1/32 drawings of the
F-5A saved me in that situation.
The HAF F-5s had many
different camouflage patterns. In recent years they were blue with silver
undersides (Aegean Blue FS 35164 and Silver FS 17178). I made an F-5A
Block 40 with Ser. No. 68-9083 of the 341 Mira (TFS) based at Nea Anhialos
AB in the late 80s.
Today they fly the F-16
CG/DG.
One thing unique to the HAF
F-5’s is that they have some of the warning stencils written in Greek.
There are no decals of these markings available, so I drew them up on the
computer using a graphics program (Corel Draw) and printed them on a clear
decal sheet.
I took almost a year to
complete this Model, but I was extremely happy to make such a conversion.
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As I was photographing this
model, a new idea came to me: It’s time to make a 1/32 F-5B!
-
Machitika Aeroskafi
Polemikis Aeroporias (Combat Aircraft of the (Hellenic) Air Force) (in
Greek) from the Model magazine „Modelling"
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Aero, (Heft 19), 1983
-
Modern Military Aircraft
(Bill Gunston)
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Colors & Markings of the US
NAVY Adversary Aircraft (Bert Kinzey and Ray Leader, 1987)
Click the
thumbnails below to view larger images:
Model, Images and Text Copyright ©
2003 by Dr. Menelaos Skourtopoulos
Page Created 30 July, 2003
Last Updated
17 March, 2004
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