Considered among the most beautiful designs that aviation ever produced, the De Havilland DH88 “Comet” is a favorite among modelers. This may explain why we have several kits of them from different manufacturers on the market. Having built them all (see the building post):
https://wingsofintent.blogspot.com/2024/11/de-havilland-dh88-comet-clear-prop-from.html
I would say that this Clear Prop! release can be proud of its position among those kits, and the fact that is injected plastic provides an option for those not comfortable with the material of the superb SBS Model resin kit.
The “Comet” needs no introduction. Five in total were built (three of them specifically for the MacRobertson England to Australia race), and the number of possible schemes, as they changed hands down the lane, easily exceeds the dozen. Clear Prop! offering has superb detail, is in general a pleasure to build, with precise molding, mostly clever engineering and mostly good fit, which explains why having built already several Comets I wanted to build this one too. As I wasn’t ecstatic by the manufacturer's conventional scheme choice, I had a look at those other schemes. If you feel inclined to do that, notice that in many cases it’s not just a matter of slapping different decals and using other colors, but also taking care of different details on the nose, nacelles, cockpit and such. SBS Model by the way offers aftermarket decal sheets for “Black Magic” and “Salazar” in case you want to adapt them to this kit.
Clear Prop! is arguably among the best injected plastic manufacturers, but there is still room for improvement. I have a few comments on this otherwise nice kit: the wing halves fit is not good and needs material removed, and the canopy and cockpit opening look to me a bit off in shape. Still, I would buy any Golden Age, Early Bird, or Classic civil kit they may produce, without hesitation. As I already have built a model of the red G-ACSS, I adapted this kit to represent Comet race number “G-16” for the Istres-Damascus-Paris race, which was yet another reincarnation of the kit’s registration. Other avatars of the same plane are “The Burberry”, “Australian Anniversary”, and the original Istres-Damascus-Paris scheme before the race that had “G-16” without the black outline, and perhaps didn’t have the race number on the center section underneath the wing. It can be also seen (and therefore modeled) as race number 5 in the King’s Cup of 1937:
The possibility of adding their aftermarket engine is a good bet on part of Clear Prop! and surely the model looks great with it. This kit will delight modelers with reasonable experience as well as advanced modelers who no doubt will extract some pretty good modeling juice from it.
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