A6M5c / 7
Comments
1 22 June 2017, 19:04
Sebastian Meyner
Thx guys! The kit "helps" a lot. Just a little wire and some seat belts. The rest is OOB....simply a great kit! 👍
Thx guys! The kit "helps" a lot. Just a little wire and some seat belts. The rest is OOB....simply a great kit! 👍
22 June 2017, 22:46
Igor Zdorovyak
While he was building his Zero, he collected a lot of material. I will be happy to help my colleague.
While he was building his Zero, he collected a lot of material. I will be happy to help my colleague.
23 June 2017, 16:37
Sebastian Meyner
Thx mates, very nice of u! 👍
I had to stop chipping for today...after two hours with a 000 paint brush my hands started to shake. Hence the blury pictures 😉
Thx mates, very nice of u! 👍
I had to stop chipping for today...after two hours with a 000 paint brush my hands started to shake. Hence the blury pictures 😉
26 June 2017, 23:16
Spanjaard
looking really fantastic. i only have a question, i am certainly not an expert in the A6M but is the color of the wheel bays correct? i have seen some pictures of real airplane were they are metallic blue. i may be wrong of course.
looking really fantastic. i only have a question, i am certainly not an expert in the A6M but is the color of the wheel bays correct? i have seen some pictures of real airplane were they are metallic blue. i may be wrong of course.
2 July 2017, 22:28
Sebastian Meyner
Thx guys!
@Spanjaard: U are 100% correct...at least for the earlier versions. I found some pictures of later models -especially one A6M7 in a japanese museum- with the landing gear bays in the same colour as the rest of the underside. Hasegawa seems to support that in their instructions. I honestly choose to follow them...because it was the easiest way 😉
Thx guys!
@Spanjaard: U are 100% correct...at least for the earlier versions. I found some pictures of later models -especially one A6M7 in a japanese museum- with the landing gear bays in the same colour as the rest of the underside. Hasegawa seems to support that in their instructions. I honestly choose to follow them...because it was the easiest way 😉
2 July 2017, 22:42
Spanjaard
thanks a lot Sebastian, good call in my opinion. thanks a lot for the info 🙂
thanks a lot Sebastian, good call in my opinion. thanks a lot for the info 🙂
2 July 2017, 23:06
Spanjaard
ha ha ha ha, indeed 🙂 sometimes i like to be as close as reality as possible, but with only black and white pictures of the originals, and museum pieces that you can not trust half of the times, i wonder why i do it 😄
in the past i was more "creative" in regards to camo colors and such, sometimes i still do
ha ha ha ha, indeed 🙂 sometimes i like to be as close as reality as possible, but with only black and white pictures of the originals, and museum pieces that you can not trust half of the times, i wonder why i do it 😄
in the past i was more "creative" in regards to camo colors and such, sometimes i still do
2 July 2017, 23:12
Igor Zdorovyak
Colleagues. The color of the wheel niches I suppose corresponds to the bottom of the fuselage. The blue-green metallic (AOTAKE) was used on Zero manufactured by Nakajima. Everything that stands in museums really does not inspire confidence.
Colleagues. The color of the wheel niches I suppose corresponds to the bottom of the fuselage. The blue-green metallic (AOTAKE) was used on Zero manufactured by Nakajima. Everything that stands in museums really does not inspire confidence.
3 July 2017, 05:24
Sebastian Meyner
You are correct concerning the museums! My point is especially with subjects towards the end of the war it's all but certain what colour was actually used. Maybe Nakajima ran out of a certain paint, the workers involved didn't see the point in using a special paint for such a limited erea or the wheel wells were just overpainted during maintenance...and so on. I think that gives the modeller a little "wiggle room" for interpretation, don't you find? 😉
You are correct concerning the museums! My point is especially with subjects towards the end of the war it's all but certain what colour was actually used. Maybe Nakajima ran out of a certain paint, the workers involved didn't see the point in using a special paint for such a limited erea or the wheel wells were just overpainted during maintenance...and so on. I think that gives the modeller a little "wiggle room" for interpretation, don't you find? 😉
3 July 2017, 12:14
Igor Zdorovyak
I'm building a model, because I like it. In my opinion this is important. Seven Zero almost did not fight and I did not need a touch up. But no source gives information about another color of the chassis niches. Paint in the color of the bottom. I think it's right.
I'm building a model, because I like it. In my opinion this is important. Seven Zero almost did not fight and I did not need a touch up. But no source gives information about another color of the chassis niches. Paint in the color of the bottom. I think it's right.
3 July 2017, 12:35
Spanjaard
it is right, if the modeller thinks it is right. even if there are pictures with one color, how says that they did not have some color at some point in time? 🙂 happy modelling!
it is right, if the modeller thinks it is right. even if there are pictures with one color, how says that they did not have some color at some point in time? 🙂 happy modelling!
3 July 2017, 17:29
Igor Zdorovyak
Hinomaru, tinted constantly. Even on very worn out machines. Probably because of respect for the flag.
Hinomaru, tinted constantly. Even on very worn out machines. Probably because of respect for the flag.
3 July 2017, 18:59
Album info
Straight OOB, except for the seat belts (Eduard) ....and maybe the wheels 😉