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First Look Review
148
Eduard Bf 109E-1
Eduard 1/48 Bf 109E-1
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by: Sam Berry [ CAMOGIRL ]

After spending a few moments looking at the box art the contents were eagerly emptied onto the bench to be looked at more closely. The instructions are to Eduard’s usual standard a nice booklet and easy to understand.

Parts wise, there are five sprues: four khaki sprues and a clear sprue. Also included is Eduard’s coloured photoetch for the cockpit details and some etched pieces for the grills along with the express mask for the canopy. The decals are again a typical Eduard offering - a good choice of aircraft and the decals are in good register.

On looking at the parts on this kit, they are cleanly cast, the few injector pin marks are in areas that will not be seen once the kit is together so minimal clean up of these will be needed.

I'm sure many of you may have read that the measurements may be very slightly out on this model. For this review I am not getting into that discussion. It looks like a 109 E-1 with good details, nice fit and will build into a great representation of the E-1 and something that the vast majority of modellers will be more than happy with - including me.

Some of the main highlights of the model I found are the full engine, which is optional to display, but looking at the standard of it I personally will be showing it off as it seems a shame to hide it away. The wheels are a nice piece of engineering: two piece separate hubs and tyres. All the control surfaces are separate allowing easy adjustments to make the model unique. The panel lines and rivets are finely detailed - I had seen some photos that made the rivet details look deep but they are not like that at all.

There was some dry fitting carried out and it appears to be a nice kit with no obvious fit issues and should require very little work when building. With the detailing on the model I think even without the Profipack additions it will build into a very stunning model, however I think the etch for the cockpit will help to add that little bit more to this lovely model.

There are four decal options for this kit:
Yellow 11, Fw. Arthur Beese, 9./JG 26, August 1940
Red 1, W.Nr. 4027, Hptm. Hannes Trautloft, Staffelkapitän 2./JG 77, September 1939
Yellow 2, 6./JG 52, Calais, France, September 1940
Brown 13,O Fw. Kurt Ubben, 6.(J)/TrGr.186, March 1940

Once I get round to building the kit I will be finishing it as Brown 13 (the box art plane) as I just adore the witch nose art on it.

Please remember, when contacting retailers or manufacturers, to mention that you saw their products highlighted here - on AEROSCALE.
SUMMARY
Highs: Typical Eduard engineering crisp details, accurate and what appears to be a great fit with dry test fitting.
Lows: I can not see any immediate issues for this in box review. A building review might show something different.
Verdict: I will certainly be looking forward to future releases of the 109 ( hopefully weekend edition boxings). Compared with what is available in this scale in this mark already I personally think this is currently the kit to have of the 109.
Percentage Rating
97%
  Scale: 1:48
  Mfg. ID: 8261
  Suggested Retail: £22.80
  PUBLISHED: Feb 23, 2012
  NATIONALITY: Germany
NETWORK-WIDE AVERAGE RATINGS
  THIS REVIEWER: 91.64%
  MAKER/PUBLISHER: 88.59%

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About Sam Berry (camogirl)
FROM: ENGLAND - NORTH EAST, UNITED KINGDOM

Hi I'm Samantha (I prefer Sam though) I've been modelling since 2002. I started modelling at my local ATC sqn and learnt everything I know from my absolutely wonderful husband (Tomcat31). I was an adult member of staff there from Nov 2004 and I left 2008 I taught modelling to the cadets as well as a...

Copyright ©2021 text by Sam Berry [ CAMOGIRL ]. 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.



   
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