F-5A Freedom Fighter
by Dr. Menelaos Skourtopoulos
|
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
|
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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"
-
Aero, (Heft 19), 1983
-
Modern Military Aircraft
(Bill Gunston)
-
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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