modelbouw databank | stash manager
AndrexP
Andrew P (AndrexP)
US

Boeing 747-100, TWA Flight 800

Album image #1
240206: Contents 
 

Album image #2
240206: Contents 
 

Album image #3
240206: Contents 
 

Album image #4
240206: Contents 
 

Album image #5
240206: Contents 
 

Album image #6
240206: Contents 
 

Album image #7
240206: Alternate decals from AirlinerDecals.com 
 

Album image #8
240206: Windows ready to be filled. Tape is hi-temp polyimide electrical tape. 
 

Album image #9
240206: Windows will be filled with inexpensive 2-part clear acrylic. 
 

Album image #10
240206: Teasing out the small bubbles with a toothpick. 
 

Album image #11
240208: Clear resin windows turned out perfectly clear and flush. 
 

Album image #12
240209: Installing a socket for the mounting pedestal. 
 

Album image #13
240209: 13 gr ballast to keep this gal from tail-sitting. 
 

Album image #14
240209: Mounting socket installed at 3 deg ANU attitude. 
 

Album image #15
240209: She'll fly! 
 

Album image #16
240213: Mounting socket filed flush 
 

Album image #17
240213: Nose gear doors sealed shut with CA. 
 

Album image #18
240216: Scribing and finishing the nose gear wells 
 

Album image #19
240213: Top seam filled with CA and filed/sanded smooth. 
 

Album image #20
240213: Tail was missing a chunk; replaced with plasticard. 
 

Album image #21
240214: MLG Bays sealed shut with scrap plasticard and CA glue. 
 

Album image #22
240215: MLG Bays after heavy sanding and smoothing. 
 

Album image #23
240216: Scribing and finishing the MLG wells 
 

Album image #24
240215: Fitting the windshield piece. 
 

Album image #25
240216: Windshield piece fit extremely well. Filler is CA glue. 
 

Album image #26
240217: Installing a spar for the horizontal stabilizer. 
 

Album image #27
240217: Makes it easier to set dihedral. 
 

Album image #28
240217: Installing a main wing spar. 
 

Album image #29
240217: Installing a main wing spar. 
 

Album image #30
240220: Prepping cowling interior for "seamless" intake tube. 
 

Album image #31
240220: Seamless intakes are a roll of .005" clear plastic sprayed grey on the outside and secured with CA glue. 
 

Album image #32
240220: Seamless intakes are a roll of .005" clear plastic sprayed grey on the outside and secured with CA glue. 
 

Album image #33
240220: Ready for Primer. 
 

Album image #34
240220: Ready for Primer. 
 

Album image #35
240220: Base coat is Krylon Now rattlecan grey primer. 
 

Album image #36
240220: Engine cowling intakes look ok. 
 

Album image #37
240220: Test flight. 
 

Album image #38
240221: Fuselage in gloss white rattlecan spray, wings in Humbrol Polished Aluminium 
 

Album image #39
240221: Wings in Humbrol Polished Aluminium. Corrogard strips are the underlying grey primer. 
 

Album image #40
240221: Wing spar facilitates temporary assembly. 
 

Album image #41
240301: Lower fuselage in various shades of MrC and Tamiya metallics.240301: Lower fuselage in various shades of MrC and Tamiya metallics. 
 

Album image #42
240301: Lower fuselage in various shades of MrC and Tamiya metallics. 
 

Album image #43
240305: Windshield decal from AirlinersDecals.com 
 

Album image #44
240305: Decals were scanned and re-printed to eliminate banding in the prints. 
 

Album image #45
240316: Window decals had to be re-created as the ones included in the sheet were too closely spaced. Doors were cleaned up too. Printed on clear film with my Epson inkjet printer. 
 

Album image #46
240403: Masked and ready. 
 

Album image #47
240403: Engines nacelles and cowl deicing painted 
 

Album image #48
240403: Installing APU exhaust from turned 1/8" tubing. 
 

Album image #49
240403: Installing APU exhaust from turned 1/8" tubing. 
 

Album image #50
240404: Rollout 
 

Album image #51
240404: Rollout 
 

Album image #52
240404: Rollout 
 

Album image #53
240404: Rollout 
 

Album image #54
240404: Rollout 
 

Album image #55
240404: Rollout 
 

Album image #56
240404: Rollout 
 

Album image #57
240404: Rollout 
 

Album image #58
240404: Rollout 
 

Album image #59
240404: Rollout 
 

Album image #60
240404: Rollout 
 

Album image #61
240404: Delivery Flight 
 

Album image #62
240404: Delivery Flight 
 

Album image #63
240404: Delivery Flight 
 

Album image #64
240404: Delivery Flight 
 

Album image #65
240404: Delivery Flight 
 

Album image #66
240404: Delivery Flight 
 

Album image #67
240404: Delivery Flight 
 

Album image #68
240404: Delivery Flight 
 

Album image #69
240404: Delivery Flight 
 

Album image #70
240404: Delivery Flight 
 

Album image #71
240404: Delivery Flight 
 

Album image #72
240405: Climbing out 
 

Opmerkingen

6 11 April, 19:19

Album info

Boeing 747-100, N93119, TWA Flight 800, c. July 1996
(Nitto Boeing 747, JAL Markings, in 1/200 scale, © 1970 (or so)

TWA Flight 800 took off from Kennedy International Airport in New York at 20:04 local time and disappeared just minutes later. The transatlantic flight to de Gaulle Airport near Paris was last heard from when they acknowledged directions from Boston Center to climb and maintain 15,000 feet just off the coast of Long Island. A minute later, a nearby airliner reported to Boston that they "just saw an explosion out here", adding, "we just saw an explosion up ahead of us here ... about 16,000 feet or something like that, it just went down into the water." Other similar reports followed. Boston Center tried in vain to contact the missing airplane, but soon realized the correlation was clear. Flight 800 had gone down in flames.

The resulting NTSB investigation was one of the most thorough and expensive air crash investigations ever conducted. The investigation eventually concluded - by ruling out all other theories - that the aircraft had exploded because of frayed wiring sparking and igniting fuel vapors in a nearly-empty center wing fuel tank. About 95% of the wreckage was recovered, along with scores of shattered bodies. The Boeing carried 230 souls aboard; there were no survivors.

May God comfort their families, and may they rest in peace.

The Nitto kit was a $5.00 find at the IPMS Regional show in Richmond, VA. The kit was surprisingly good for its age, with excellent fit except for the landing gear doors. It is light on detail (there is no wheel well detail). Engines are three piece affairs, two halves and a compressor wheel, with no openings for the bypass duct or turbine exhaust. Brass rods were used as spars to facilitate removal and re-installation of the wings and tail planes. Construction was simplified by the omission of tiny, breakable details like antennae to allow ground handling by fledgling, 4-year-old wannabe aviators that frequent our home.

Decals were ancient, yellowed, and brittle depictions of a JAL bird. I found the right markings from AirlineDecals.com, although the decals themselves required extensive manipulation in MS Paint to get them to fit: the windshield decal was undersized, cabin windows were too small and too closely spaced (I eventually made my own) and the leading edge on the tail logo was not sufficiently angled. Corrections were printed on clear decal film with my Epson inkjet printer.

Paints were rattlecan grey primer and gloss white, with Tamiya and Mr. Color (MrC) metallics.

The kit is a humble tribute to this tragic loss.

72 afbeeldingen
1:200
Voltooid
1:200 Boeing 747 (Nitto 311-400)1:200 Being 747-100 TWA (Airline Decals )

Alle albums

Bekijk alle albums »