Hasegawa 1/72 FW-190D-9 'JV-44'
KIT # |
00722 |
PRICE: |
1400 yen MSRP |
DECALS: |
Two Aircraft |
REVIEWER: |
|
NOTES: |
2004 Limited Edition boxing |
HISTORY |
Late in the Second World War, German fighter ace and hero, Adolf Galland, was ousted as General of the Jagdwaffe due to his alleged incompetence and inability to prevent Allied bombers from laying waste to Germany. Actually, the story is much more complicated than what it seems as it always is when political in-fighting gets to be the most important part of the job and not the mission at hand.
Needless to say, Galland was a bit on the insubordinate side, but not enough to have him shot. Instead, he requested to start a new jet unit called JV-44 and to use not only the Me-262, but to call in the best pilots (that were left) from around the Luftwaffe to join him. The word spread and a number of very famous and capable pilots joined with Galland when he got things going in early 1945. Of course, by that time of the war, the Germans were advancing to the rear at a rather high rate, so the unit spent most of its time moving and did very little in the way of shooting down enemy planes. I would not be too far off to say that in the few months of existence, JV-44 probably brought down only a few dozen planes if that many.
Now one of the problems of the 262 was that it was quite vulnerable during the landing and take-off phase. Since the Germans were unable to maintain air superiority over their own country, this meant that quite a few jets were shot down by marauding Allied fighters during this phase of operation. In order to protect the jets, most jet units had a dedicated 'protection flight', generally made up of the best piston powered fighters around, and that meant the FW-190D.
JV-44's protection flight consisted of around 4-6 planes, each with the underside gaudily painted in red (and some say black as well) with white stripes. These were to keep the local anti-aircraft batteries from blasting them out of the sky!. Due to these very colorful markings, they were called the 'papegei' or parrot Staffel. They are probably one of the most modeled units around. I can remember painting up an old Airfix 1/72 FW-190D-9 back a couple of decades ago. I used white stripe decal for the stripe and scrounged the spares box for the numbers.
THE KIT |
The instructions are well done and typically use Gunze paints for the
color references.
Both aircraft have separate windscreen/canopies so you can pose them
open. If
you do the later 'blown' hood, you should remember that there was no antenna
tensioning system in it so the radio antenna just lay along the fuselage when
the canopy was open. The decals themselves are house decals from Hasegawa. That
means they are a bit thick, and the whites are actually ivory and will be a bit
transparent. This is the second (at least) boxing that has Papagei planes on it.
In this case, the planes are red 1 and red 3. Unlike the previous kit, the white
stripes are separate items as these were not put on uniformly. Also the previous
boxing had black 1, but it has since been determined that this number was red.
CONCLUSIONS |
This is a very nice kit and like all of Hasegawa's 1/72 kits can be made into an equally nice model. There are lots of aftermarket bits for it as well if you want to spend more $$ on it. It is one I can recommend to nearly all skill levels.
May 2015
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