Styrene

Styrene

Friday, September 21, 2018

Timm N2T-1 in civil galore. Modified Execuform vacuformed 1/72nd kit.

This little, simple, picturesque touring plane is now completed thanks to the decals from Arctic Decals.
(The step-by-step build process is here:
https://wingsofintent.blogspot.com/2018/08/timm-tutor-on-civil-guise-execuform.html



































Friday, September 7, 2018

Flight of the Phoenix, Scratchbuilt 1/72nd scale (Timm/Tallmantz P-1 Phoenix)

 

The Phoenix raises again!

 For the step-by-step building post you may go to:
To avoid any confusion, let's start by saying that the plane in the movie was...several planes.
As you know, the Fairchild Packet is the plane that crashes. Then a (not actually flying) plane is "made from it" that is used in the film scenes as a static prop. At the same time, a flying  plane was designed by Otto Timm and built by Talmantz Aviation for the filming of the flying scenes. After the crash that took the life of Paul Mantz, another plane was converted to have a vague resemblance to the general lines of the Phoenix, a North American O-47.
The model I am presenting here is that of the Timm-Tallmantz Phoenix P-1, the plane flown by Paul Mantz to film the flying sequences, and not the non-flying prop used for many other scenes on the ground. All those planes differed noticeably from each other.
This plane never took off or landed on the desert (real or film location), but operated from a local airfield. It had silhouettes to represent the "passengers" in order not to have drag and weight added. The only windshield was that of the pilot, the ones for the passengers were just frames. 
Knowing that a AT-6 Texan nose, engine, propeller, cockpit and wheels were used, plus the wings from C-45 Expeditor, I used those -combined with the measures of the actual plane- to draw a set of sketches as a guide for the construction of the model.
Yet once again I take pleasure in transforming bellicose machines into higher-purposed birds.
The construction of the models employed known techniques and utilized a few already-made kit parts cited above. Some hours were spent needless to say checking photographs (there are much less images available than one would have thought) in order to adjust and re-adjust the home-made construction sketches. I usually don't weather models, but the original plane shows in the movie signs of its problematic origins.
The only decal was -as usual- commissioned from and provided by Arctic Decals from Finland, the country as you all know where all the planes' fins are made.

Mantz obituary in the New York Times (at the Cloverfield.org page:
goes as far as stating that the movie was based on actual events, mentioning that during WW2 a mechanic refashioned a twin-engine plane into a single-engine one and took six men strapped to the wing to as nearby base, which is absolutely bogus, as far as I can tell, and no records whatsoever exist of that. I think the Times was the victim of an ethically-questionable movie studios ploy to sell more.
Ethics were as scarce then as they are today in much more important places, if you get my meaning. 

Finally, as those who are familiar with the movie know, the Phoenix, born from the ashes, returned to the ashes after its crash, only to be re-born again an again in our models to illustrate one of the most beautiful metaphors about life.