1⁄48Nowotny Fw 190A-5 I/JG54
9
Comments
Jean describes his latest Aeroscale model: "Eduard's A5, built all closed, no picnic there, with the markings of Walter Nowotny when he flew with I/JG54 on the northern part of the Eastern front in 1943. I have used my own interpretation of the field applied greens. one is pure RLM70, the darker, the other one being a mix of RLM71 and H 320 from Gunze. The upper surfaces were treated with oil streaks. Decals are from the Eduard's dual combo, JG54 Grünhertz."
Comments
Hi Jean
That's one great looking Butchers Bird.
Well done.
Cheers
Chris
JUN 21, 2014 - 07:59 AM
Jean,
Just an outstanding build. Your camo paint scheme, decaling, and weathering are all simply superb.
I do have one question since I'm less then a neophyte of German WW11 aircraft. The antenna seams to be attached to the sliding canopy. In the open position the antenna looks taught. What happens when the canopy is closed?
Joel
JUN 21, 2014 - 09:54 AM
Hi Joel
This type of canopy had a pulley system to keep the aerial taught, whether it was opened or closed. The later bulged canopy did away with the pulley, so the aerial went slack when it was opened.
All the best
Rowan
JUN 21, 2014 - 06:31 PM
Nice work. I had the same model, it was long ago )))))) and in 72 scale. Good luck jean
JUN 22, 2014 - 06:57 AM
Very nice, the yellow spiral on the spinner is quite unusual, was it particular for JG54 at this time or just Nowotny?
JUL 15, 2014 - 05:52 AM
Copyright ©2021 by Jean Barby. Images also by copyright holder unless otherwise noted. The views and opinions expressed herein are solely the views and opinions of the authors and/or contributors to this Web site and do not necessarily represent the views and/or opinions of AeroScale, KitMaker Network, or Silver Star Enterrpises. Images also by copyright holder unless otherwise noted. Opinions expressed are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of AeroScale. All rights reserved. Originally published on: 2014-06-21 05:56:59. Unique Reads: 13329