Airfix 1/48 Buccaneer S.2B
KIT #: | 08110 |
PRICE: | $100 SRP |
DECALS: | Three options |
REVIEWER: | Stephen Young |
NOTES: | Kits World 148140 decals, and Eduard p.e. |
HISTORY |
The history of the Blackburn Buccaneer began
in 1953 with the United Kingdom Royal Navy requirement for a new strike
aircraft capable of a payload of 4,000 pounds designed to attack sea
vessels as well as land targets. Two aerodynamic breakthrough features
were incorporated into the design; boundary layer control where engine
bleed air was blown over the wing flaps to reduce take off and landing
speeds and the area rule. This principle reduced the fuselage cross
section to achieve significant reductions in aerodynamic drag.
Designated NA.39 the first prototype designated XK406 first flight
occurred on April 30, 1958. Twenty pre-production aircraft were ordered
followed by the production S.1 version. Trials showed the aircraft to be
underpowered with the original de Havilland Gyron Junior engines and the
aircraft’s performance potential would not be achieved until the Rolls
Royce Spey 101 was installed in the S.2 version. Introduced into Royal
Navy service with the S.1, No. 801 Squadron commissioned at Lossiemouth,
Scotland in July, 1962 followed by No. 809 Squadron, No.800 Squadron and
finally No. 803 Squadron. Service use resulted in a series of accidents
attributed to inadequate engine power that would be corrected by the RR
Spey in the S.2. Buccaneers served in the RN until the last through deck
carrier, HMS Ark Royal, was retired in December, 1978 bringing to a
close the Buccaneer’s service with the Royal Navy. A new career was to
begin with the Royal Air Force when controversial and severe defense
budget cuts led to the decision to provide Buccaneers to fulfill the
mission planned for canceled purchase of General Dynamics F-111s. The
first RAF aircraft were delivered in 1978 designated S.2B and differed
only in some details from the Royal Navy aircraft. The RAF aircraft
eventually were retired in 1994 and replaced by the Panavia Tornado.
Well known to all Buccaneer affectionados as “Grandma’s
Finest Hour” when the 1991 Gulf War commenced operations, the
Lossiemouth Wing at Lossiemouth, Scotland deployed an initial batch of
six Buccaneers to the Gulf for the purpose of providing
laser-designation capability to the Tornado GR.1 force (that had no such
capability at that time). The S.2Bs received new secure radios, old
style S.1 wingtips for a smoother ride over the desert floor, updated
chaff and flare dispensers, IFF upgrades and were repainted in ARTF
(Alkali Removable Temporary Finish) “desert pink”. An additional six
were deployed within weeks and all twelve aircraft received names and
artwork. Six received pinup style artwork on the starboard side and
eleven received the famous “Jolly Roger; Sky Pirates” patchwork on the
port side. All airframes also received the names of local malt whiskies
made in Lossiemouth. During the first weeks of the deployment the
usual weapons load was one AN/ALQ 101 electronic warfare jamming pod
carried on the starboard wing outer pylon, a slipper fuel tank carried
on the inner starboard hardpoint, a AN/ALQ-23E Pave Spike laser
designator pod carried on the port wing inner pylon and a AIM 9L
Sidewinder air to air missile carried on the port wing outer pylon.
XX885 “Famous Grouse” is the subject of this build. The aircraft was delivered to the RAF on May 20, 1974 and served with 15 and 16 Squadrons at Laarbruch, Germany before being transferred to Lossiemouth, Scotland in 1980. As a result of spar fatigue cracks leading to a tragic loss of the crew and Buccaneer XV345, XX885 underwent replacement of the main wing spar. She subsequently served with 208 Squadron. In January 1991 she was prepared for the Gulf War being painted in overall ARTF, given the tail code “L” and named “Famous Grouse” after the local malt whiskey and painted with pin-up style nose art “Caroline, Hello Sailor” on the starboard side and the Jolly Roger on the port side. Noteworthy is the overpainting of almost all stenciling on the Gulf War Buccaneers. She earned seven combat mission symbols, one of which included the AN-12 symbol. In actuality the AN-12 was bombed and destroyed by Buccaneer XX894 but XX885 was on the same mission and after landing was parked by mistake in XX894’s spot resulting in the kill symbol being painted on the aircraft in error. After returning to Lossiemouth at the conclusion of the Gulf war she was repainted in gray before being retired in 1994. Although no longer airworthy she remains in storage at RAF Scampton owned by Hawker Hunter Aviation.
The bulged bomb bay was introduced by Hawker Siddeley after its takeover of Blackburn Aircraft and allowed extra fuel storage.
THE KIT |
This is the 1994 tool 1/48 Airfix kit that has been issued in
several different packages starting with #8100 (1994) labeled as the Hawker
Siddeley Buccaneer S.2B with decals for two Royal Air Force aircraft in dark
green/dark sea gray camouflage and one Operation Granby aircraft in desert
pink and later #08101 labeled as the H.S. Buccaneer S.2, S.2C, S.2D, SMk50
(all without the bulged bomb bay) with decals for three Royal Navy aircraft
and one South African Air Force aircraft. Finally in 2005 Airfix reissued
the kit #09180 as a two complete aircraft kit package that included two
instruction manuals and decals for three Royal Navy, two Royal Air Force,
and one South African Air Force aircraft. Note that the South African Air
Force Buccaneers had different electronics and therefore antenna and sensors
than the British aircraft as well as different weapons suite and these are
provided as additional individual parts where required. This model was built
from the 1994 release that includes decals to model one Buccaneer that was
deployed in the 1991 Gulf War. The kit instruction booklets are pictorial in
nature and include detailed steps with paint color assignments using Humbrol
acrylics (and no other paint types) but there are some steps that
require care to avoid construction mistakes. The first is the installation
of the navigator's windscreen, part #84, that is to be glued to the cockpit
coaming from below before installation of the cockpit tub. It can be
installed from above but the lower tabs on the part will need to be
carefully removed in order to do this. The second is the orientation of the
main landing
gear right and left halves and the relationship of the main gear wheels. On
the Buccaneer the main gear wheels have the oval openings on the inside
toward the aircraft midline; it is easy to reverse the orientation during
assembly. Also just in front of the ventral side of the airbrake the
fuselage panel in the Gulf War versions contains flare ejectors (part #97).
My assembly omitted all external small parts such as pitot tubes, sensors,
and antenna until final assembly to avoid breakage during the construction
and painting. The non-transparent parts are molded in a light blue rather
hard styrene plastic with engraved panel line detail and recessed fastener
detail utilized except on the bulged bomb bay where raised panel lines are
used. A common occurrence is significant warpage of the fuselage halves that
consist of upper and lower fuselage half components. In addition there are
some incorrectly molded parts such as the in-flight refueling probe that has
an incorrect angulation of the distal end, and engraved panels that are
incorrect in size and location on the forward fuselage. The fit of the
engine intake cowls is very poor as is the fit of the engine exhaust cones.
The option is provided to build the model with the wings in the folded
position but the fold mechanism (part #37) provides no detail. If the wing
is attached in the extended (unfolded) position the assembly rib (part #39)
provides a weak assembly (my assessment, as the joint and the outer wings
would not have sufficient strength to allow the model to be lifted by the
wing) and this needs to be reworked with spar support unless the model will
never be picked up by the wings. There are reasonably done vortex generators
on the upper wing. The underwing slipper fuel tanks are very oddly
engineered as a three component assembly that is difficult to achieve
satisfactory alignment. Decals are provided to represent the cockpit
instrumentation. Ordnance provided includes two slipper fuel tanks, one
AIM-9L Sidewinder missile, one AN/ALQ 101 electronic warfare jamming pod,
one AN/ALQ-23E Pave Spike laser designator pod, and two Sea Eagle missiles.
A new tool S.2B is due from Airfix soon and will likely resolve the
engineering and mold issues as did the recently released S.2C/D kit.
Unfortunately, until the new tool S.2B is released the old kit is the one
providing the bulged bomb bay of the Buccaneer S.2B. The old Eduard photo
etch cockpit set #48132 was installed for added cockpit detail. In addition
the Kits World decal set KW148140 that provides decals for all six
Buccaneers sporting pin up style nose art during the 1991 Gulf War
deployment was used.
CONSTRUCTION |
For satisfactory construction of this model a planned approach is
needed to deal with the various problems of fuselage warpage and poor
component fit. My original plan was to build the model as an out of the box
build but I decided to add the cockpit photo etch as the closed canopy fit
was sufficiently imprecise to warrant leaving the canopy open. The upper and
lower fuselage warpage is a significant complication that must be overcome.
The kit instruction sequence was generally followed although some deviation
was needed to facilitate painting and eliminate risk of small part breakage.
The Eduard cockpit photo etch set required removing some of the molded in
detail in the cockpit and ejection seats with substitution of various photo
etch assemblies. These were assembled and glued in place using VMS
cyanoacrylate glue. Once the photo etch with the exception of the
instrumentation was installed the cockpit sidewalls, tub and ejection seats
were painted with Tamiya XF-19 Sky Gray as the base color as well as primer.
All details were hand painted
with Vallejo Acrylic colors. The instrument panels were installed and
painted separately. Once complete, the cockpit tub without the ejection
seats installed, was glued in place. Two ounces of lead weight was glued
into the upper and lower nose cone areas using five minute epoxy glue; this
is safe for styrene plastic and once cured has no petrochemical residue that
will soften or deform styrene while providing excellent adhesive properties
to keep the lead in place. The bulged bomb bay (part #88) must be glued in
place in the opening in the lower fuselage half. Since this component has
raised panel lines they were re-scribed. The bomb bay was then glued in
place with Tamiya Extra Thin cement and the longitudinal joints with the
fuselage reinforced with Evergreen strip styrene cemented in place with
Tamiya Extra Thin cement. Much test fitting was utilized to determine areas
of misalignment in the fuselage join process. In addition it was clear that
the engine intake assembly would lead to major fit and misalignment that
would require filling and recontouring if the kit assembly process was
followed. If the originally intended simple joining of the upper and lower
fuselage halves is accomplished with no added shimming test fitting showed
that there would be a significant contour mismatch where the projecting
lower fuselage wide alignment tab joins the ventral part of the engine
intake cowling. Because of this the assembly of the engine intake cowlings
was changed in the following way. The lower tab that was required to fit
into the cut out of the cowling was carefully separated from the lower
fuselage with a micro saw. It was then glued into the cut out in the cowling
and the minor seam filled with CA gel/talc. To determine the fit the
fuselage halves were temporarily held together using rubber bands revealing
that shimming of the area around the intake would be needed to avoid
significant contour mismatches. Shimming was done using Evergreen 0.020
sheet styrene 90 degree angle strip glued to the top and bottom fuselage
halves at the join line where it was needed. Some shaving of the rearward
shims is needed to obtain an aligned joint at the forward wing root. To
maintain alignment along the remainder of the fuselage join 0.020 inch thick
sheet styrene tabs were glued at intervals along the join line from the nose
to to the tail. Relying only on the molded in locating pins is insufficient.
The fuselage halves were then glued together using Tamiya Extra Thin cement
along its length in stages over a few days to allow each section to
completely cure before moving on to the next section. Heavy rubber bands and
clamps were needed to maintain the correct compression and alignment in the
process. It is impossible to obtain alignment without doing the gluing in
stages over time. After allowing the horizontal join line to cure completely
it was reinforced using five minute epoxy layered along the join line. The
resultant reinforced joint was sufficiently strong to withstand the usual
handling and manipulation that would
follow with no risk of seam separation. Areas of misalignment and small
contour defects along the seam were corrected using Loctite CA gel plus
talcum powder as a filler; it cures rapidly and is easily carved, filed or
sanded to a seamless transition if worked within 24 hours. Unlike any
surfacing putty compound like Bondo or similar it will not pull up with tape
masking. Since this build my current favored method for larger area filling
and contour correction is now Amazing Sculpt epoxy resin due to its longer
working time and ability to be smoothed and shaped before curing. It is more
coarse in texture than the CA gel/talc formulation so with high gloss or
metallic final finishes more priming to seal the surface is needed. All
obscured panel lines were re-scribed using the superb Tamiya 0.01 mm
scribing blade. The next significant work involved attaching the intake
cowlings and their trunks. The kit intake trunks are capped at the end with
the compressor face. The cone at the compressor face is severely undersized
so I built a larger cone and cemented it in place. The intake trunk is white
color so this was airbrushed with Tamiya XF-19 Sky Gray followed by Tamiya
X-2 Gloss White. The compressor face was painted Tamiya X-11 Chrome Silver
and when cured the part was cemented onto the end of the intake trunk. The
cowl required a significant amount of fitting, shimming with 0.020 sheet
styrene, and filling with CA plus talc to obtain a good fit. Once this was
achieved the bright chrome ring of the cowl was achieved by priming with
Tamiya X-1 Gloss Black followed by several light airbrushed coats of Alclad
Chrome. Once cured this was oversprayed with a light coat of Testors
Glosscote lacquer. The intake trunk was then cemented to the cowl and the
entire assembly was cemented in place. The exhaust trunks required less work
to fit in place but also needed to be painted before assembly. Unfortunately
the exhaust is molded in two halves with a lengthwise seam. I could not
readily find a correct diameter tubular component to replace it so installed
it after painting with Tamiya XF-1 Flat Black and over sprayed with a thin
coat of Tamiya X-10 Gunmetal rendering the seams invisible except to direct
flashlight illumination. The vertical fin was cemented in place and any join
seams addressed as needed followed by attachment of the horizontal
stabilizers. The modeler has the option of the folded wings or unfolded
wings and the appropriate end part must be cemented into the open section of
the fuselage wing panel. If you have concerns about doing a folded wing on a
Gulf War Buccaneer a simple internet search will reveal several images of
these aircraft with their wings folded. The fold attachment part is very
basic and devoid of detail so most will want to rework it for a folded wing
version. Although a Air Waves photo etch wing fold set is available in my
assessment it lacked convincing realism and robustness to warrant the cost.
The model has the option of either the open or closed unique clamshell air
brake. I decided to do the open version and this assembly was painted
separately and finished for installation during the final assembly steps.
0.020 brass rod was used to make attachment pins for the underwing pylons,
Sidewinder missile, slipper fuel tank, and pods. Additional pins were made
using fine guitar string wire for the multiple antennae to be attached later
as well as the in-flight refueling probe. 0.030 brass rod was used to make
pins to strengthen the main gear leg attachment to the fuselage gear wells.
After all painting and weathering was completed the multiple small parts
were attached such as the various antenna, pitot tubes, senor probes,
ordnance and pylons, and clear lights. The inflight refueling probe is
molded at an incorrect angle and this was corrected by cutting and
reattaching the horizontal section at the correct angle before installation
on the fuselage. The ejection seats were glued in place using five minute
epoxy followed by attachment of the clear canopy sections using Micro
Kristal Kleer. The underwing pylons and weapons suite was attached using
Loctite Professional CA glue.
COLORS & MARKINGS |
The wheel wells were treated by adding small gauge copper wire to
represent hydraulic lines and were then masked off and primed with Tamiya
X-1 Gloss Black; when cured the wells were airbrushed with Tamiya XF-19 Sky
Grey followed by detail painting with Vallejo acrylics. The canopy opening,
engine intakes and exhaust ducting was carefully masked followed by a wipe
down of the surface with a cotton patch wet with 70% isopropyl alcohol as a
degreaser. After a wipe off of any contaminants with a tack cloth the entire
fuselage was primed with Tamiya X-1 Gloss black thinned 40% with generic
Kleenstrip lacquer thinner (sold at Home Depot) using the so called “black
basing” technique. The outer wings were assembled per instructions and the
builder must select the correct wing tips for the standard RAF versus the
Gulf War aircraft. Note that not all twelve of the Gulf War Buccaneers had
the same wingtips and photo verification is needed when modeling a specific
aircraft. A small amount of seam work was needed on the wings prior to
priming. All Buccaneers sent to the Gulf War were overpainted in ATRF
(Alkali Temporary Removable Finish) “desert pink”; a color reportedly close
to Federal Standard FS30279. After viewing as many color images as I could
find it appeared that the FS30279 shade was excessively dark even if
significant fading and scale effect is factored in. With experimentation
with the goal of trying to reproduce the very weathered/faded desert pin the
final mixed paint color is closer to FS32360 so that is what was used from
mixing appropriate Tamiya acrylic colors. Several light and intentionally
non-uniform airbrush applications were made giving tonal variation
throughout the different aircraft components. Additional light overspraying
in areas of the undersurface and specifically on the wing pylons and pods
was done with mixed paint closer to FS30279 for contrast interest. The
painting required several sessions over multiple days until a final result
was reached. After a rather lengthy period when model building attention
turned to other simultaneous ongoing projects the components were gloss
coated with Future thinned 1:1 with 91% Isopropyl alcohol. This
mix dries
rapidly and several light coats were applied; control to avoid runs is very
easy with this thinning ratio compared to airbrushing the unthinned Future.
Several days of curing is always best after the clearcoat in my experience
before moving on to decal application and weathering.
The decals used are the kit decal roundels and Kits World set KW148140 that provides decals for all six Buccaneers sporting the pin up nose art. The original kit decal sheet is large and impressive providing complete stencils and markings for the No.12 Squadron aircraft XW530 or No.208 Squadron XX900. The Gulf deployed aircraft markings are for XX889 and employ only a few of the sheet decals as most stencils were overpainted. Testing the decals revealed disintegration when placed in water so the entire sheet was airbrushed with Testors GlossCote lacquer thinned 50% with lacquer thinner. When cut from the sheet the decals need to be cut close to the original film outline otherwise the dried lacquer will transfer to the application site. I have used Microscale Clear Decal film but have had no success with it on these particular decals to prevent fracturing. The Kits World decals are very thin, easy to apply and are excellent in quality but for XX885 the pin up art appears undersized when compared to photos of the original aircraft as marked. All decals were applied using Micro Set and Micro Sol.
These aircraft weathered heavily and were quite dirty in appearance during the short deployment so weathering was done using Tamiya brown, black, and gray panel liner, Grumbacher artist’s oils, airbrushed heavily thinned Tamiya XF-1 flat black and pastel chalk. After weathering was completed a final clear coat of Testors clear lacquer in a mix of about 50/50 gloss/dull thinned about 40% with Mr. Color Leveling Thinner was airbrushed to seal the finish with a satin to dull finish.
Paint product safety notes: Kleenstrip lacquer thinner is a traditional formula lacquer thinner and will craze and with prolonged exposure dissolve styrene plastic. I use it for thinning priming paint or compatible primers to obtain absolute adhesion of the primer layer that will prevent any paint pull up with masking. If applied by airbrush in thin coats there will be no visible styrene damage but never brush on paint thinned with traditional lacquer thinner. Please note that traditional lacquer thinners contain complex ketones, esters, and alcohols demonstrated to be toxic so adequate respiratory protection (outside venting spray booth and wearing an organic filter respirator) and skin protection (nitrile gloves) is required when used.
CONCLUSIONS |
This 1990’s era Airfix kit definitely is not the high point of the Airfix kits of that time period; some kits were not at the leading edge of the mold technology being demonstrated by other major contemporary manufacturers like Tamiya, Hasegawa, Dragon, and Monogram/Revell. The major and apparently near universal warpage of the fuselage halves requires building skill and some innovation to effectively overcome and will severely detract from the building experience for less experienced modelers. The odd engineering in areas of the engine inlets and exhaust will just be additional challenges for the builder. These issues can be overcome of course but be aware and be prepared. To my building style this is the type of model that will take a significant amount of time to complete as concurrent projects will provide a needed welcome relief periodically. The final result does capture the aircraft’s unique appearance very effectively and well. The curves alone are a wonder to behold on one of the fastest low level jet warplanes ever made and in its Gulf War finish it does stand out against the standard RAF camouflage and common contemporary gray aircraft.
REFERENCES |
www.thunder-and-lightnings.co.uk
Wilson, Keith. Blackburn/BAE Buccaneer Owners’ Workshop Manual, Haynes North America, Inc., 2018
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