
Any experienced modeler knows that there are kits and kits, but
modelers and manufacturers are mainly used to more or less conventional parts
breakdown and engineering, with the odd unconventional take here and there.
Sometimes these different approaches work, sometimes they just seem to hinder
more than helping. Kits are mainly similar, but that’s just on the surface. The
differences deepen considerably when kits are not just eye candy, attic insulation
or are being stroked whispering “my precioussss”, but actually built. Take the “in
box” reviews with more than a pinch of salt, even more so when the reviewers
-or the site they post on- depend on kit samples or sponsoring. Building them
is how kits’ true soul is revealed. Modelers sometimes marvel at how some old kits
are better than new kits, when logic would dictate the opposite. Even kits
produced roughly in the same timeframe -that have access to the same
technologies and aware of the state of the hobby evolution- are sometimes
worlds apart. This long exordium was just to present an unusual modeling case
(not unique, but rare enough): that of Revell’s Ilyushin Il-4 (Revell spells it
“Iljuschin” in Geman).
Here I am afraid I have to make another digression: very few
know that in the country of Volkania, in Marzipan Province, lies the lair of
Evil Genius Zönke Schulz. From his untervolkano secret vaults and dungeons, he used
to send some equally evil kits to torment me, as he knows I can’t resist build
them. The list of spawns that he bestowed upon me and I have built would be too
long, and those kits made for more than one Horrible Dark and Stormy Hobby Night... they
are all posted on this blog. So let’s just deal with the one at hand, this
Revell kit, the has obscure origins according to Scalemates: starting around
1990 it was produced -if I understood correctly- by VEB Plasticart, and besides
Revell it’s been released by other brands like Reifra and Master Modell.
Why am I interested in this relatively old kit? Two reasons:
its unusual engineering and detail, and the fact that (as I don’t build
military models) it can be converted to an earlier DB-3 that performed remarkable
flights, among them one from Moscow to New York (more on that later) for the
1939 World Fair. In fact there were two of them used for records and
high-profile flights; the other was named “Ukraine”. Speaking of Ukraine (I
know, third digression, but humor me) as I was looking for this very kit the I hid in horror from myself in my own
dungeons after its arrival from Volkania, I found these other two that I bought long ago from Ukraine, you know,
when we liked and helped Ukraine, before President Stupid and his pathetically
incompetent entourage
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You can see how nice the Ukrainians are (notice the cards,
the souvenir currency bills, the candy, the coupons); how polite, how educated,
unlike President Moron and his completely stupid wars costing American lives
and spending tons of money that could help his own people. Sigh…
Anyway, as mentioned before, the kit has some unusual
engineering and quite detailed parts for its age, including a reasonably depicted interior and
deployable flaps. And look at the molding, barely any flash even in the
smallest parts (and there are plenty of those). As explained above, Master Marzipan dutifully and painfully erased all raised panel lines, depriving me in the process of a guide to trace the engraved ones. As said, he wants to psychologically destabilize me:
There is some internal structure detail:
A number of small parts are cleanly molded:
Reasonably clear transparencies:
The bonga-bonga bits that go into the "someday these may be converted into something more useful" bin:
Regarding the conversion, there is some material online
about the two “civil” DB-3s, both red overall. One had “Moskva” in bold
Cyrillic characters under the wing, and the other had “Ukraine” under the wing
and on the nose. “Moskva” remaining parts show bright red for most of the plane
and a dark, burgundy red/maroon for the nacelles. The sister plane, “Ukraine”,
had a similar, but not identical scheme, reputedly with blue cowls.
The Moscow-New York flight was cut short for technical and
meteorological reasons and ended up doing a rough landing in Miscou Island, New
Brunswick, Canada. Pilots were shaken but ok. An account (containing detailed,
but not always relevant or pertinent information) of the deed can be found
starting on page 3 of this PDF:
https://atlanticcanadaaviationmuseum.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/nov20021.pdf
But I am choosing “Ukraine”, as I like the idea of Russia
honoring Ukraine, before wannabe dictator (and President Stupid’s pal)
Pooteen attacked and invaded it.
For the conversion the labor starts by gathering as much
references as possible and play the “Game of the 100 differences” comparing the
kit and the photos of the desired plane. The changes here centered mostly on
completely deleting military features, filling the turret position, removing and making a
new different nose, ream-off the fans from the cowls’ faces, modifying the cowls
surface detail, removing details on the nacelles and wing not present in the intended
plane, and depict details like Pitot, antennas, etc, accurately. It is known
that the plane had long distance fuel tanks added, but precisely how or where it
could not be ascertained. In any case the cockpit bulkhead seals the fuselage, and
the new nose will have the position for the second man as shown in photos. The
fuselage needs to be rounded a bit as the upper section has shoulders molded on
it that shouldn’t be there. This may necessitate packing the inside corners
with a small cord of Milliput to add material and support. The recess under the
kit’s tail to lodge the tailwheel is faired over in this plane.
It should be pointed out that there is another Ilyushin Il-4
kit by Mister Craft, a different mold that simplifies some of the engineering
-compared to the Revell kit- and then proceeds to complicate it in a different
way separating the wing in awkward sections that make no sense. Go figure.
This Revell kit has a horrible fame regarding fit, and
looking at the engineering there is no mystery as to why it is so. The mere parts' awkward breakdown is a harbinger of disaster.
Even Revell's own kit box photos show the fit gaps:
To help with the necessary nose replacement I acquired a VP
Canada vac kit that has the two nose options, Il-4 and DB-3. We will see to
what degree the new vac nose can be grafted to the Revell kit. As the VP kit as
explained has the noses of both types, it will still remain a viable Il-4 kit for
some other modeler.
So... as Gimli rightly expressed:
The nose section of these three parts needs to be separated (the forward pilot position just for convenience to be able to work that area unhindered, it will be re-glued to the other section later):
Assembly of some minor parts starts. The joystick of the second pilot is drilled through to render a better handle. The landing gear on the record versions was slightly different, but here the legs are left alone to avoid weakening them :
Very carefully, the tick landing gear doors are thinned down from inside with a drum sander and rotary tool:
The inaccurate "shoulders" on the fuselage top are sanded down to a more constant curve shape:
Some of the raised panel lines that were obliterated could have resulted useful if left:
Some of the other projects being built in parallel:
The VP Canada Vac arrived! It's a really nice vac kit, with recessed panel lines, plenty of detail, and 3 options (not two as I initially thought). BUT: the transparencies have yellowed a LOT, and when I tried in other kits that had the same issue the dozens of methods proposed by other modelers to restore clarity, NOTHING ever worked. While the surfaces and detail are great, and the molding sharp and clear, many parts are useless, like props, engine, spinners and wheels. No resin or metal parts are provided to substitute these*
*Actually they were as I later discovered, but they were absconded at some point from my kit, which I bought on Ebay:
In fact the paneling and detail are
way better than in ALL other injected kits of the same subject:
Documentation is nice and detailed to a degree:
The hatches that are located on split lines are provided separately, poorly molded I am afraid, unlike the rest of the kit:
The two noses as clear parts. They are also molded on the main white styrene sheet, so you could use either the clear part or carve the windows out from the white parts (at least for the blunt nose option, that will still need to be capped by the clear nose tip):
The canopy and
I think that if I use the blunt nose option of this kit at all, I will be using the white vac sides of the nose, cut out the windows and use "window maker" to fill the openings, then adding the clear front part, thus reducing the use of yellowed parts to just one.
Well, that's not going to work. The height of the section where the nose begins differs from the Revell to the VP kit by about 5mm. So not even close.
Options: use all the detail parts of the Revell kit in the vac (which completely lacks them). Grafting these parts may prove challenging. The interior perhaps not to so bad, but the landing gear would necessitate adaptations and scratchbuilding, as well as the engine/cowl assemblies.
No easy way here apparently...
So kit-bashing of the interior and details of the Revell kit and the rest from the VP Canada vac, which has much better surface detail and sounder engineering (and not those ill-fitting four fuselage slabs of the Revell kit)
Note: apparently I was conned on Ebay as the VP kit did have resin bits originally, as reported here:
https://modelingmadness.com/review/allies/ussr/attardil4.htm
https://www.scalemates.com/kits/vp-canada-14-ilyushin-il4-db-3m
No resin parts came with my kit.
To be continued...