This exquisite little gem from the works of a one-man-in-a-room enterprise in Argentina is a refreshing and beautiful piece of the local aviation history.
With a super-clean cast, delicately mastered parts, and fine
detail, it is up there with the best in resin releases, and no doubt a product
at the very top of cottage industry.
If you compare this resin kit with most of what you see in
the market (and I have built -and still have in the stash- many), you may feel
the urge to trash some of the ones lurking in your stash, which compare
extremely unfavorably with this one.
The kit portrays a small training plane built in quite large
numbers -that is for a country with an aviation industry that had its ups and
downs-, that went into the civil and military market, being provided to the
local aeroclubs as a way to encourage aviation by the government.
It started as a pre-war endeavor, but had to wait until the
50's to be built in series.
It still flies today, in some remarkable numbers, which says
something about the design and construction, especially given the constrictions
many times suffered by South American countries.
This is not a kit for the beginner, and it's better if you
have built a couple of simpler resins before, but it's a very noble kit, that requires
of course care, a delicate touch, and some skill (as the kit box itself states).
This release offers alternate parts and decals for four
different machines. The decals are home-made and can be used, but Arctic Decals
has printed a more professional set.
I found no defects, whatsoever, in any part. Some of the
detail parts are tiny and require mindful handling. The engineering is very
sound and the approach intelligent.
It took only a few days to build it, even in parallel with
several other projects, but it's a build that you don't want to rush, given the
delicate detail and small parts.
It made for a short and pleasurable build, as you can see in
the building article:
https://wingsofintent.blogspot.com/2020/01/72topia-fma-iae20-boyero-172nd-superb.html
I wish other cottage industry manufacturers will take the
hint and up their game. This kit demonstrates what skill, care and love for the
hobby can do, even in less than ideal conditions for the maker. So next time
you get one of those resin blobs, with pinholes, bent parts and dubious (if
any) detail, here is a bar to compare against.
Waiting now for the next kits that are soon to be released
by this able, dedicated and meticulous manufacturer.
Fantastically done, 72Topia!
Thanks!
ReplyDeleteEn lo personal, el Boyerito más bonito, y las fotos, fantásticas!... Gracias!!, por el tiempo dedicado, por el aliento, pero también por remarcar los puntos difíciles del kit... La idea primaria del proyecto, además de ser lo más fiel posible al avión real, es que se pueda disfrutar del armado del modelo. Por eso el énfasis en tener en cuenta estas cuestiones, y haberlas tratado de superar para los próximos modelos... Esperemos haberlo logrado... Abrazo enorme... ^ ^
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I personally, the most beautiful Boyerito, and the pics, fantastic!... Thank you!!, for the time spent, for the encouragement, but also for highlighting the difficult points of the kit... The main idea of the project, in addition to being as faithful as possible to the real plane, is that can be enjoy the assembly of the model. That is why the emphasis on taking these issues into consideration, and having tried overcome them for the next models... Hopefully we have succeeded...
Matías, it's all your talent!
DeleteMatías, es todo tu talento!
I come across three views of other planes from this lineage in Argentina In my little William Green books and I’ve always admired them and it was lovely to see you bring one to life- Bravo
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Thanks Vance!
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