World War II
Discuss WWII and the era directly before and after the war from 1935-1949.
Discuss WWII and the era directly before and after the war from 1935-1949.
Hosted by Rowan Baylis
PHOTOS: MODEL
MC 202 FolgorePosted: Friday, June 22, 2007 - 07:46 PM UTC
It's not every day that Aeroscale can present an award winning model so we are proud to show you Derek Hanson's (Percheron) splendid MC 202 1/48 scale model which made a 1st place at the IPMS show 2007 in Washington State.
Link to Item
If you have comments or questions please post them here.
Thanks!
Posted: Saturday, June 23, 2007 - 06:32 AM UTC
Hi Derek
Congratulations on your success in the contest! Thoroughly deserved - it's a superb build! Many thanks for submitting the fresh pics for us all to enjoy.
All the best
Rowan
Congratulations on your success in the contest! Thoroughly deserved - it's a superb build! Many thanks for submitting the fresh pics for us all to enjoy.
All the best
Rowan
Posted: Thursday, June 28, 2007 - 01:16 AM UTC
Great build. Very well deserved price at the IMPS show.
I have a Folgore in my stash and I am puzzled about the camouflage scheme. Did Folgores have a camouflage scheme with spots on one wing and rings on the other? Or does the model represent a plane with a substite wing from another plane?
Thanks for sharing your great model - and congratulations on the prize
I have a Folgore in my stash and I am puzzled about the camouflage scheme. Did Folgores have a camouflage scheme with spots on one wing and rings on the other? Or does the model represent a plane with a substite wing from another plane?
Thanks for sharing your great model - and congratulations on the prize
Percheron
Washington, United States
Joined: September 23, 2006
KitMaker: 432 posts
AeroScale: 360 posts
Joined: September 23, 2006
KitMaker: 432 posts
AeroScale: 360 posts
Posted: Thursday, June 28, 2007 - 03:00 AM UTC
Hi Jesper,
Yes, the wing was a replacement. The Hasegawa kit was the "Italian Aces" kit which shows the right wing having smoke rings. I tried to copy the box art but had a heck of a time getting the camo scheme depicted to look right, so I got creative. Jesper, I know you are neck deep in campaigns, but I hope you build your Folgore, I have not seen many (if any, lately) turn up on Aeroscale. It would be great to see what other folks do with this plane.
Also, thank you all for your kind words about this build!
Yes, the wing was a replacement. The Hasegawa kit was the "Italian Aces" kit which shows the right wing having smoke rings. I tried to copy the box art but had a heck of a time getting the camo scheme depicted to look right, so I got creative. Jesper, I know you are neck deep in campaigns, but I hope you build your Folgore, I have not seen many (if any, lately) turn up on Aeroscale. It would be great to see what other folks do with this plane.
Also, thank you all for your kind words about this build!
Posted: Thursday, June 28, 2007 - 06:00 PM UTC
Hi Darek, thanks for the quick answer. Very interesting and super cool that you are building a specific aircraft with that unusual camo scheme.
I am also feeling like starting on my Folgore, but as you said there a few campaigns to attend to as well. Maybe a Mediterranean Sea campaign for 2008
I am also feeling like starting on my Folgore, but as you said there a few campaigns to attend to as well. Maybe a Mediterranean Sea campaign for 2008
Tarok
Victoria, Australia
Joined: July 28, 2004
KitMaker: 10,889 posts
AeroScale: 174 posts
Joined: July 28, 2004
KitMaker: 10,889 posts
AeroScale: 174 posts
Posted: Thursday, June 28, 2007 - 08:28 PM UTC
Lovely work! Congrats on the award!
This plane really has lovely lines... very much an air racing look... Looks like quite a tight cockpit to enter though...
Perhaps a stupid question, but I noticed that the insignia on the wings are different. The hook-thingy faces outwards on both, thus pointing in opposite directions. Was this purely aesthetic? Or was there a reason the Italians did it this way?
Again, awesome work, and please forgive my questions if they seem ignorant
Rudi
This plane really has lovely lines... very much an air racing look... Looks like quite a tight cockpit to enter though...
Perhaps a stupid question, but I noticed that the insignia on the wings are different. The hook-thingy faces outwards on both, thus pointing in opposite directions. Was this purely aesthetic? Or was there a reason the Italians did it this way?
Again, awesome work, and please forgive my questions if they seem ignorant
Rudi
Posted: Thursday, June 28, 2007 - 08:55 PM UTC
Quoted Text
I have not seen many (if any, lately) turn up on Aeroscale. It would be great to see what other folks do with this plane.
Hi Jesper and Rudi!
I've built the MC 205 "Veltro" (very similar Hasegawa kit) in 2004 and the markings are also mirrored. It seems it was a common pratice but I don't know why? Maybe someone has the answer to this?
Jean-Luc
Tarok
Victoria, Australia
Joined: July 28, 2004
KitMaker: 10,889 posts
AeroScale: 174 posts
Joined: July 28, 2004
KitMaker: 10,889 posts
AeroScale: 174 posts
Posted: Thursday, June 28, 2007 - 11:11 PM UTC
Hey Jean-Luc,
Nice build!
How did these hold up in comparison to their Allied adversaries?
Rudi
Nice build!
How did these hold up in comparison to their Allied adversaries?
Rudi
Percheron
Washington, United States
Joined: September 23, 2006
KitMaker: 432 posts
AeroScale: 360 posts
Joined: September 23, 2006
KitMaker: 432 posts
AeroScale: 360 posts
Posted: Friday, June 29, 2007 - 04:14 AM UTC
Quoted Text
Lovely work! Congrats on the award!
Perhaps a stupid question, but I noticed that the insignia on the wings are different. The hook-thingy faces outwards on both, thus pointing in opposite directions. Was this purely aesthetic? Or was there a reason the Italians did it this way?
Rudi
Thank you Rudi. I did not find out why they had them face out like that, however they were based on a Roman weapon of war. The color insignia by the cockpit is the same.
Quoted Text
How did these hold up in comparison to their Allied adversaries?
Rudi
The Folgore and Veltro did very well against Allied aircraft, but like many victories it depended on the pilot. The Folgore had a license built Daimler engine built by Fiat, it made less power than the Daimler and was not as reliable. The Italians did not have the production capability the Germans had so they did not make that many. What is interesting is the left wing is longer than the right by a few cm. This was done to counter prop torque. BTW, what does Fiat stand for? Fix It Again, Tony.
-Derek