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In Progress » PK40 Fledermaus
Panzer Kamp Flugzeug 40

07.15.05 » Concepts and Source Materials

So next on the to-do list is the Fledermaus from the Nitto Maschinen Krieger line. A friend of mine Fulcy is going to eventually do his Fledermaus in a bare metal finish. Eventually... perhaps a decade from now. LOL! After he mentioned it to me I had a hard time picturing it. After a while though the idea started to grow on me so I worked up a scheme and asked him if he'd mind me doing mine in a bare metal as well since I didn't wanna just outright take his idea. He didn't mind as his will be VERY different from what I'm doing.

My Fledermaus will have a dull almost flat aluminum feel to it with minimum shine. I want it to have an overused/undercleaned look about it. This will be an interesting challenge though as bare metal seems to be something difficult to pull off in a nice way. I think weathering it in the typical Maschinen Krieger style will help in that respect. Bare metal will show off every flaw while the weathing will help hide them. Here's a picture of my intended scheme:

I found some great tutorials on bare metal detailing that I'll be using as reference. Here's the links:

All of those were chock-full of great information and I highly recommend reading them.

07.15.05 » What the Fledermaus!?

I got started on the kit and as usual there were plenty of parts fit issues. That's not so bad usually, but when you couple that with instructions that are missing pieces, air-vents that you can see into the hollow innards of the aircraft through, seams down the middle of very detailed boosters, and parts that just could not possibly be intended to fit where they're supposed to according to the manual, you're in for a challenging build.

The first thing that was screwey was the two halves of the cockpit. These were slightly warped (at least I hope they were warped and not actually produced this way) and didn't go together very well. Thankfully the nose helped guide them into position, but there's still some shift to deal with when the canopy is in place.

The next issue was the intakes on the sides of the cockpit. These were completely non-detailed and left huge openings to see into the crafts body. To seal these up I cut some "V's" from styrene and glued them together to make something resembling a sliding intake cover. I've seen pictures of similar things on real aircraft. When I glue on the top half of the body, these will be bent forward, pushed back, and glued to close up the gaps. In the first image below you can see how it is bent, but not pushed back into position thus leaving a small triangular gap. In the second image you can see where I added styrene to close up some HUGE gaps in the intake that would be visible after adding my intake covers.

Next is the seat and inside of the cockpit. This will actually fit after everything is painted so I can add it afterwards and not worry about masking it. Sadly it's pretty underdetailed and has a goofy piston thing sticking into the back of the headrest. I'll be skipping that piece and detailing up behind and around the seat to look more like an ejection seat. I'll also be adding more details to the cockpit, instrument panel, and making some fixed-pose hinges for the canopy to keep it in an open position. I may even split the canopy into two opening halves. Front and back.

Next is the burner nozzels. Big and pretty, but they'll need a lot of work. All 5 of them have seams running right down the center. This can't be helped though as it's a trade-off between detail and ease of finishing. The nozzels have 2 halves and one "fan" insert apiece.

Finally for this update is the supports for the front landing skid. In the red circled area you can see a peg that is supposed to magically bend into that large hole. Never gonna happen. So I'll be doing so modifications there to make it look natural and like it belongs there.

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