The plane as it looked for the 1937 Istres-Damascus-Paris race:
After completing the really challenging and extremely poor Couzinet kit, I thought I deserved a break, and went for this other remarkable French machine that was also used to carry the mail over the Atlantic from France to South America.
When I first saw the kits of the various versions of the Farman 220 family released by Azur in 1/72nd scale I was ecstatic. In time I acquired, quite by accident, two of those kits.
These were appealing machines: unusual, large, of elegant lines, historically relevant and just plain awesome. For me the bonus was that there were two special connections: F-APUZ -one of the boxings- flew to Santiago de Chile via Buenos Aires -where I was born- from France, and also participated in the Istres-Damascus-Paris race, for which I already had modeled other participants, two Savoia Marchetti SM79s, a DH88 Comet, a DH89 Rapide, and the Fiat BR.20:
https://wingsofintent.blogspot.com/2015/04/savoia-s79-corsa-adaptation-from-172nd.html
https://wingsofintent.blogspot.com/2015/04/savoia-marcehtti-s79-corsa-completed.html
https://wingsofintent.blogspot.com/2018/08/fiat-br20a-istres-damascus-paris-racer.html
https://wingsofintent.blogspot.com/2024/11/de-havilland-dh88-comet-g-16-istres.html
Since this kit promised to be quite an endeavor, the boxes were stored until the time would come to honor them.
I have seen some nice models built from this kit on the Net, which leads to the next matter:
After studying literally hundreds of images, newsreels, publications and documents, I am of the opinion that the main color of 223-1 F-APUZ was some hue of silver grey (in line with what was being done at the time) and not the color stated by the kit's instructions. I have seen so far only two models painted on what I consider is the right tone, and I am planning to paint mine silver grey. Contemporary models of the Farman 220 family in Air France colors show them painted silver and blue.
The engine gondolas are normal metal color, though.
Fellow modeler and friend Alain Bourret has written a detailed article on the released kits, pointing out to some things that need to be corrected, as it is the case with most kits. Two issues of Air Magazine were dedicated to the Farman 220 family and published coinciding with the kits' release.
The 223-1 kits I got have detailed cockpits but no interior, and I could not find anything about that matter in years of on-and-off searches. The fuselage in any case only has very small circular windows, but the nose transparency provides a partial view to an empty space. I may open the fuselage door as it is shown that way in many photos (it opened to the interior, unlike in other planes).
The kit has a very nice surface and proper detail, but more can be added if desired. The molding is clean and the edges sharp, with a bit of flash here and there. There are no locating devices whatsoever, which in the case of the larger parts (fuselage and wings) and the complex engine gondola strut arrangement, will surely make life interesting. The box includes a few resin parts for the engine area. Mine were partially damaged in transit and will be difficult to repair.
The parts once separated from the sprues and cleaned up. Don't do this if you feel you may have trouble identifying the parts later on:
Care is needed to extract some of the parts, and then some cleanup is in order:
The forked part with the peg was either a short pour or broken in transit (as it is supposed to be symmetrical), with the missing bit nowhere to be found:
The wings will need some detail added (aileron linkages and such):
Some of the windows will have to be opened by the modeler, according to the version:
The transparencies are thick but reasonably clear. The window count for the nose part is different for the two versions of F-APUZ (Istres-Damascus race or transatlantic flights). More on that will be explained later:
As usual, some reading material, from the Gallica repository and other sources to whom we should grateful to.
The Istres-Damascus race:
Transatlantic flight:
The box art inaccurately depicts the nose windows for the transatlantic postal flights...
...as that version had a double row of windows:The racer -with a single row of nose windows- had the race individual "code" (F2) on a white background on the fuselage sides and wings:
The door on the kit's fuselage side is inaccurately located about 5mm ahead of where it should be (as well as the circular window associated with it). Photos also show that the door had a rectangular window:
As photos clearly demonstrate. The shock absorbers are the ones that should be at an angle:
Thus the gluing of the parts is modified accordingly:
Notice that I am assembling the LG BEFORE closing the gondola sides, as I think it's easier than adding all the fiddly parts once the gondola halves are glued together.https://www.criticalpast.com/video/65675057736_Paul-Codos_Le-Bourget-Airport_flight-to-Buenos-Aires
Notice the antenna array with masts above the cockpit and wires going to the tail. I remark again that details varied from the transatlantic flier to the racer. Below is the right assembly sequence ONCE ALL PARTS ARE PAINTED separately:
Remember that all the wheel axles NEED to be drilled to accept their forks' pips.
Notice that the tail wheel fork comes in two parts. All these need to be
painted again separately, as trying to pry open the glued fork to
insert the tailwheel will most likely break the assembly.
So many of the fins are damaged on both radiatiors, have to think how to repair them:
The gondolas are of course not as detailed as the originals, but still fair to a degree. Many details can be added looking at photos. The exhausts at the back were not grouped as molded, but in two sections instead:
This is a kit made by people proud to do a good job in many aspects. The fit of the interior parts -almost always an area that requires a lot of adjustments in most kits- is perfect. All goes in well and halves can be joined without a problem. A lesson to be learned by a loooong list of manufacturers:
This is what a nice X-acto tool box used to looked like. Like many things from a time now gone, they were not manufactured in china to lower standards. In this particular case, please especially notice the quality control tag, by Petra Figueroa. Also from a time when this country respected and rewarded hard workers, no matter where they came from, and offered them a path to a better lifeLocation of mass balances, aileron linkages, Pitots, and some instrument under the chin:
Detail to be removed, circular window not for this version, and pilot holes on the other circular windows:
The needed openings are completed, a door is fabricated:
fins are cut from very thin styrene. The next problem to solve is how to cleanly remove all the damaged fins that need replacement without breaking the adjacent ones:
The wings present a banana effect that has to be dealt with before gluing the halves:
Photos do show dihedral, but with LE and TE perfectly straight.To be continued...