Taking a first look at plan and parts.
Here's a first warning: the instructions seem confusion in that they only show the front halves in assembling the cockpit. However, Step 1 clearly indicates the important note to first glue the respective parts together (left nose to left fuselage parts and right nose to right fuselage parts) before you close the whole things later on.
One of the issues that nees fixing is the inconsistencies of panel lines. Some are quite ok, while others are barely visible, so an overall rescribing of the model is needed.
Added a bit of plastic card here and there to make it fit better.
At this stage I decide to not bother about what would not be visile (back seat) and paint these windows black from the inside.
Make sure to drill out the wholes for the wing "spars" before you glue the fuselage halfs together. More sanding and a bit of filling to get these all nice.
I inserted smoe rods to make sure the opening was nicely aligned with the front engine parts. As for the latter, make sure they align nicely before glueing.
Another interesting bit is the navigation lights (look online for reference photos). To make the correct shape, I used clear sprue and to create the form and sanded in shape. I then drilled inside for the light itself by using two different sizes of drill bits. Add the colour et voila. (note the plastic card on the inside to make it fit.
Wings completed. As you can see, I worked on and finished the wings before I glued them to the fuselage. It proved to be far more practical in terms of handling the parts while dry-fitting etc on the engines, nav lights and fuel tanks.
Gary Victory Very nice build of a classic Canberra. Top job Guido.
4 January, 07:18
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Images from when I built the Canberra.
This Classic Airframes is not a walk in the park, not for the faint hearted, nor beginners or impatient builders eager to get a result quickly. It will test your patience, skills and perseverance.
If you take it to the end though, you can add an impressive cold war jet (it's 48th scale!) into your display cabinet. Kept me busy for a good nine months.