Trumpeter, the Chinese producer, have published on their official website many photographs puting some light on their latest releases which are F-117A and A-4M in 1/32 scale and a Spiteful in 1/48 scale.
That Spiteful sure looks interesting. I've always liked its combination of aggressive and graceful lines.
Seems like the folks at Trumpeter followed AZ Model's curious example of including hypothetical Finnish markings. Nothing wrong with that, it's always nice to see FAF markings in a kit, but that still strikes me as somewhat implausible, considering the extremely limited post-war budgets imposed on the Air Force - for example, wartime Bf 109s were operated way up to the mid-fifties. But hey, isn't that the fun of what-if models anyway?
Merlin
Senior Editor AEROSCALE
#017
United Kingdom Joined: June 11, 2003
KitMaker: 17,582 posts
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At the risk of sounding like somebody else, I was really looking forward to the Spiteful, but something looks very odd about the undercarriage. It just doesn't match any of the reference shots I've got...
All the best
Gas.. Rowan
BEWARE OF THE FEW...
As I grow older, I regret to say that a detestable habit of thinking seems to be getting a hold of me. - H. Rider Haggard
Jessie_C
British Columbia, Canada Joined: September 03, 2009
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It's just Trumpeter doing their part to encourage the aftermarket parts industry. After all, Trumpeter do have a reputation to live down to.
When once you have tasted flight you will walk the Earth with your eyes turned skyward.
For there you have been, and there you will always long to return.
-Leonardo Da Vinci
EdgarBrooks
England - South East, United Kingdom Joined: June 03, 2006
KitMaker: 397 posts
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Trumpeter were sent illustrations of the u/c oleos, taken from the A.P. in the National Archives, so should have got it right. I'll wait until I see the kit, before commenting, but the bottom part of the leg curved round the wheel; it was not completely straight, as with the Spitfire. I note that they have corrected their original test shots, in which the fuselage had an incorrect "scooped-out" area behind the pilot's headrest. Edgar
Merlin
Senior Editor AEROSCALE
#017
United Kingdom Joined: June 11, 2003
KitMaker: 17,582 posts
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Quite true, but the way Trumpeter seem to have tackled the legs looks so exaggerated, the end result looks quite bizarre - at least from what can be seen in Steffen's photos from the Nürnberg Toy Fair such as this one:
Okay , I blame you guy's for striking up that interest on the landing gear legs on the spit . Had no idea what the hell you were talking about ...hey it's not a biplane after all ! So I went online to have peek and you guy's seem to be right on how " funny " looking the under carriage is . What I find weird is how small the main landing wheels are ! .........
Terri
EdgarBrooks
England - South East, United Kingdom Joined: June 03, 2006
KitMaker: 397 posts
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It looks as though they got the wheels too fat, and then overcompensated on the curvature of the strut around the wheel. A piece of brass strip bent to shape and radically thinned down wheels should do the trick.
But of course by the time I did that, the aftermarket industry would have come up with brand new struts, wouldn't it?
When once you have tasted flight you will walk the Earth with your eyes turned skyward.
For there you have been, and there you will always long to return.
-Leonardo Da Vinci
EdgarBrooks
England - South East, United Kingdom Joined: June 03, 2006
KitMaker: 397 posts
AeroScale: 384 posts
One big problem, which will be overlooked on the more virulent anti-China lobbies, is that the only sets of drawings, that I know of, show a completely wrong leg, as well. As so often, a company, with no access to the real thing, are let down by published information. Edgar
AussieReg
Associate Editor AUTOMODELER
#007
Victoria, Australia Joined: June 09, 2009
KitMaker: 8,156 posts
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I might be barking up the wrong tree here (as is often the case), but in the toy fair pics linked by Rowan the card actually labels the aircraft as a Seafang HERE , not a Spiteful. I was just wondering if that may be the cause of the differences in u/c ?
Ok, I'm off to find the correct tree to be barking up !
Cheers, D
ON the bench
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29Foxtrot
Victoria, Australia Joined: September 19, 2003
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I attended the 2012 Melbourne Toy and Hobby Fair and on the Australian Agents stand was a assembled test kit in 48 scale of the Trumpeter SEAFANG and in speaking to the {Australian Agents} National Sales Manager in relation to the SPITFULL his reply 'was it's comming soon'
President:- Southern Model Club.
Those who never learn from history will always repeat it.
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For your tomorrow we gave our today."
Merlin
Senior Editor AEROSCALE
#017
United Kingdom Joined: June 11, 2003
KitMaker: 17,582 posts
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Sorry - I should have made it clear that I was linking to Steffen's pic of the Seafang test-shot. Judging by the sprue shots in the News item, the two kits share the same parts for the undercarriage.
As far as I know, the Spiteful, Seafang and Attacker all used basically the same landing gear, but I'll obviously defer to Edgar on whether they were strictly 100% identical.
All the best
Rowan
BEWARE OF THE FEW...
As I grow older, I regret to say that a detestable habit of thinking seems to be getting a hold of me. - H. Rider Haggard
vanize
Texas, United States Joined: January 30, 2006
KitMaker: 1,954 posts
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While I agree that the wheels are a little too wide (but not grossly so), I think their biggest error in this landing strut "scoop out" is the fact that they have the main strut positioned over the in-board part of the wheel, while on the real deal, the strut is over the out-board side of the wheel (the model has the scoop covering 2/3rd or 3/4ths the wheel width, while it should really be more or less centered over the outer edge of the wheel).
here is the main gear for a supermarine attacker, which i *believe* had the same wing and landing gear (from a walk around on primeportal):
compaired to (from IPMS Deutschland):
Would it really be so hard to cut off the offending curving part of the landing gear, cut off some of it to reduce the 'scoopage', and pin and glue it back in place (after, of course, sanding some thickness off the wheel halves)? I suppose we'd have to eliminate the fictitious arms that hold the strut well fairings way out as well and straighten out those bent extenders, but that would also be trivial. I think that is something most of us can handle, providing the shape of the model holds up well otherwise...
Mecenas
Joined: December 23, 2007
KitMaker: 1,596 posts
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Come on Vance, don't tell me really believe that companies like Trumpeter or Hobby Boss reads forums like that and after "good advices" they got here will stop production lines to improve some parts in landing gear. Sorry, I don't buy that. However this is still an usefull information for anybody who will buy the kit and try to make a more-less correct replica.
vanize
Texas, United States Joined: January 30, 2006
KitMaker: 1,954 posts
AeroScale: 1,163 posts
Come on Vance, don't tell me really believe that companies like Trumpeter or Hobby Boss reads forums like that and after "good advices" they got here will stop production lines to improve some parts in landing gear. Sorry, I don't buy that. However this is still an usefull information for anybody who will buy the kit and try to make a more-less correct replica.
not the production lines they have now, but eventual corrections have been seen from major manufactures in the past based off feedback from the consumers - e.g., the tamiya 1/48 Bf 109E and its cowling.
and generally no, for a single kit i doubt even that much, but the manufactures can learn the art of the quality assurance process (I happen to be a QA engineer myself) so they don't do such things in the future. The Chinese firms are hit and miss because they have not established a strong quality assurance tradition, but if we keep pointing out their mistakes, they might decide to change this.
Jessie_C
British Columbia, Canada Joined: September 03, 2009
KitMaker: 6,965 posts
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Come on Vance, don't tell me really believe that companies like Trumpeter or Hobby Boss reads forums like that and after "good advices" they got here will stop production lines to improve some parts in landing gear. Sorry, I don't buy that. However this is still an usefull information for anybody who will buy the kit and try to make a more-less correct replica.
Ttrupmeter has been known to correct kits based on the feedback from modellers who viewed test shots. The most well-known one was the 1/32 Wildcat, which had to have its fuselage retooled. I don't know what it cost them, but fix it they did.
Who knows, maybe the horse will sing?
When once you have tasted flight you will walk the Earth with your eyes turned skyward.
For there you have been, and there you will always long to return.
-Leonardo Da Vinci
Mecenas
Joined: December 23, 2007
KitMaker: 1,596 posts
AeroScale: 1,275 posts
I like the Skyhawk, but the price is going to be out of my range. I had a snap tite kit of a Skyhawk when I was 6 or 7. Always wanted to do one again.
Great nations do not fall because of external aggression; they first erode and decay inwardly, so that, like rotten fruit, they fall of themselves. The strength of a country is the sum total of the moral strength of the individuals in that country.
Ezr
vanize
Texas, United States Joined: January 30, 2006
KitMaker: 1,954 posts
AeroScale: 1,163 posts
Come on Vance, don't tell me really believe that companies like Trumpeter or Hobby Boss reads forums like that and after "good advices" they got here will stop production lines to improve some parts in landing gear. Sorry, I don't buy that. However this is still an usefull information for anybody who will buy the kit and try to make a more-less correct replica.