(The step-by-step assembly post is here:
https://wingsofintent.blogspot.com/2023/12/ford-v-8-truck-193637-ace-of-ukraine.html
This is undoubtedly an excellent kit, with magnificent detail for the scale. It’s well molded, although with some little flash and mold partition lines, and caters for three possible versions. The decals are well printed, in register and the color is solid. The manufacturer’s perfectionist approach makes it feel as if this were a 1/35 scale in miniature. The instructions are well printed, and clear -to a point- but leave some details in obscurity. I am almost sure they got confused, in some minor way, about which parts are for which version. Decide early on which truck you want to build, and test and re-test to be sure which parts you need before committing to glue anything. Many parts are minute, and some are fragile, so be warned. Extract and clean the parts as you need them so not to lose them, and bear in mind some that a few parts for different versions are almost identical. Every part has some kind of locating device, so during clean up be sure not to obliterate “flash” that is not flash. Extreme care is needed to extract the parts form the sprues, as stress would result in the parts breaking, so Xuron-type tools won’t do but for a few larger parts. There are some extremely small pips, tongues and indentations that are there for a reason. It’s difficult if not impossible to paint the model once assembled so if you can, paint the subassemblies, depending on your choice of truck. The P.E. set is good and sharp, but the parts that have bending marks may brake at the “hinge” if you try to correct the bend. The metal is not very forgiving. No clear parts are provided, not even for the headlamps. Only patterns for cutting clear material are printed in the instructions, no clear material is provided. I added home-made headlamps and modified the kit housings to accept them.
In general this type of kit in this scale has a lot of detail just molded-in, not as separate parts, and a lot of butt-joints, instead of keyed parts, so it’s a welcome change in approach, although for the less experienced modeler it may feel over-engineered or a tad challenging. I think it’s a step ahead in kit mentality.
The fit after cleanup -when needed- is good, with a few exceptions (see the building post).
The only real flaw I find in this kit is the engineering of the cabin windscreen frame, where the windscreen posts get divided in two parts. This produces a very weak joint, difficult to align properly, to clean up and to smooth up. The windscreen section should have been either part of the cabin roof, or the hood, or a separate part altogether; as it is molded, it’s a source of continue problems (my assembly, in spite of being extremely careful, broke twice). That was a poor solution, and it's inexplicable why the designer made such obvious mistake. Besides, the fit of the cabin front panel (where the pedal are) is too tight for the hood (which is canted inwards), again posing problems during final assembly. As I said already to exhaustion: what looks fantastic on the screen of the person designing the kit can become a real pain for the modeler. The person doing the 3D-modeling work should always think of the processes of assembly and painting, and bear in mind that tolerances are critical, and allow for some very small wiggle room, as computer doesn’t translate 100% into reality. A big image on the screen will be a minuscule part on the hands of the modeler, so will the locating devices, etc.
This kit requires care and attention, it’s not an easy build because of the number of parts and very small detail and some uncertainties regarding fit and proper version parts, but it’s a very good kit indeed. In fact, I liked it so much that I bought another.
ACE, the Ukrainian manufacturer, should be praised for the general quality of the kit and the choice of beautiful civil subjects.
I recommend that if you are building one (and you should if it’s your kind of thing) that you carefully read the construction post; it may save you a head-scratching or two.
Modelers that build civil machines are grateful for this kit, being vehicle modelers or airplane modelers. Planes look always great when photographed with vehicles, which is what I use them for.
What a neat little kit, and a very nice build, as well! Sure does lend a really nice atmosphere when posed with a period aircraft model!
ReplyDeleteThanks!
DeleteIt's such a cutie.
Love the Ace Ford and the Airfix Ford AT-5. I too am building BOTH. With 3 Small Stuffs P&WS for the AT-5 & Cricut windows for the Ace...a note of appreciation for teaching us the corrugate lead edge main wing trick when you built SACO
ReplyDeleteThanks. And good luck with those rewarding builds.
DeleteBy the way, the corrugations trick was not "invented" by me, I saw that time ago used in different sites, one being Wings of Peace.
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