Building Revell's new
1/48 scale
F/A-18E Super
Hornet
Part One
by
John Chung
Revell's 1/48 scale F/A-18E Super Hornet is available online
from Squadron
For more information about the new
1/48 scale Revell
F/A-18E Super Hornet, please visit my
in-box review here on Hyperscale.
Because of the amount of materials I’m hoping to cover, I will have to
divide this article up into several parts. I’ve been thinking about
doing just a simple write-up and skip over most of the details. However
I’ve settled upon a more complete article that covers as I may the works
I’ve done and the reasoning behind them. I hope this will eventually be
helpful to those who may also want to approach the Revell F/A-18E in
like manners.
Cockpit
Revell included a decent rendition of the SJU-17 NACES ejection seat,
and was a natural starting point for detailing. The over-simplified aft
section was removed and rebuilt with correct width and details. The
headrest should be recessed between the hardness instead of protruded
and was corrected. Further improvements included seat cushion
modifications, scratch built harness and ejection handle.
The main instrument panel was an absolute gem out of the box and the
control stick wasn’t bad either, although the throttle was rebuilt from sprue.
I did notice the cockpit side consoles and sidewalls didn’t meet up, and
a couple evergreen strips were used to remedy the issue.
The instrument coaming did not represent those on the Super Hornet,
so it was slightly reshaped and modified with sheet plastic and
stretched sprue. De-fog vents were made by grooving the plastic and
filling it with putty then immediately impressing the holes before the
filler cures. This useful trick was outlined by master pattern maker Jef
Verswyvel on his tutorial for the 1/32 F-16C cockpit. A scratch built
HUD was made from styrene strips and acetate sheets.
Click the thumbnails below
to view larger images:
The aft decking was modified by relocating the canopy hook holes and
opening a couple recesses that weren’t present. Eyehook were also added
along with a scratch built canopy actuating mechanism as the kit example
was poorly represented and undersize. Note that the width of cockpit
sill was modified as well according to references.
I’ve found the provided canopy interior framing to be
too narrow in height, evidently a byproduct of the misshaped
canopy/spine contour (more on that later). The framing was thus slightly
modified and various scratch built paraphernalia attached prior to
painting. Thin electrical tape strip was used to represent the canopy
pressure seal, a trick from Bernhard Schrock’s Hyperscale F/A-18A
article.
Click the thumbnails below
to view larger images:
Main Fuselage
The main fuselage was done in an upper-lower halves setup, including
the wings inboard of folding mechanism. A few pieces needed installation
prior to fuselage closing, which fit generally well. Revell recommended
installing the intake/side fuse pieces prior to closing fuselage halves,
though I’ve elected otherwise to facilitate a stronger joint and easier
clean up of filler, as both the lower LEX and aft fuselage needed a bit.
Before the fuselage halves were closed the APU exhaust on the bottom was
drilled out and rebuilt.
As the Revell supplied intakes were about half the lengths as they
should be, I’ve elected to install intake covers instead. Personally I
would have preferred the appearance the full trunks instead. Particular
attention was needed near at the rear fuselage where much filler was
needed, mostly due to plastic shrinkage. There was also step in the
plastic just below the horizontal stabs that shouldn’t exist and needed
addressing. Vortex generators were added on either sides of the heat
exchanger exhaust located between the vertical stabs. The exchanger
exhaust themselves are passable, but I’d rebuild them if I were to do it
again.
Click the thumbnails below
to view larger images:
It came to my attention that the Revell spine was somewhat off in its
contour, and that a total fix would be rather difficult if not
impossible. However, it’s possible to get it to look relatively right.
The issue is confined to the immediate area just aft of the cockpit,
which is too narrow and may be a little too tall. This resulted in a
spine cross section that’s too rounded compared to reference images. The
shape issue in term propagated over the entire cockpit length and
affected everything up to and including the forward windscreen. The main
canopy framing was such that its overall width and height became too
small great, respectively.
Click the thumbnails below
to view larger images:
I eventually lowered the spine and widened it along with a section of
the cockpit for a more representative cross-section. The canopy frame
was judiciously removed from the clear section, modified and then
reattached. The forward windscreen was also lowered near the back to
reduce its slope and produce a better looking frame height. The overall
fix seemed dramatic over a few attempts, but it’s relatively straight
forward now that I know what I needed to do. Although not completely
accurate, it does produce a more accurate looking spine.
Click the thumbnails below
to view larger images:
Finally, the panel line on the spine insert was misplaced and was
rescribed to the correct location.
As a last note, I was pointed out that the ventral fuselage channel
between the engines is too deep, and careful examination revealed this
to be correct. However, addressing this issue would encounter too many
constraints and considering the panel line details are also quite off,
it would render it too much work for to little benefit. I chose to
neglect this issue.
Click the thumbnails below
to view larger images:
Forward Fuselage
The forward fuselage is a four-piece affair comprising
main left-right sections and top and bottom inserts. The two inserts
needed careful cleaning before attaching and still a little filler to
smooth out. Both the IFF box and refueling probe doors were slightly
misshapen and were fixed accordingly without too much fuss.
Click the thumbnails below
to view larger images:
Overall fit of the forward fuselage assembly was not great and my copy
also showed distinct evidences of short-shot around the joint. The
avionics bay hinges represented by raised steps also caused issues as
lost details were near impossible to replace.
Click the thumbnails below
to view larger images:
Revell mysteriously molded dimples on the forward fuselage just fore
of the LEX leading edge that was filled and detail replaced. The LEX tip
had a distinctive downward kink and was also a bit short, so it was
straightened and extended.
Click the thumbnails below
to view larger images:
A side note, although Revell did not include it there should be an entry
handle just under the canopy. The earliest aircrafts had no handles,
including ‘Vampire 100’. The first handles were a rectangular design and
the current batches all have semi-octagonal ones. If you so desire make
sure you research the specific a/c for handle configuration.
End of Part 1
Model, Images and Text by Copyright ©
2006 by John Chung
Page Created 03 March, 2006
Last Updated
05 March, 2006
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