Title: |
FH/F2H Banshee in Action |
Author: |
Jim Mesko |
Publisher |
Squadron/Signal Publications |
Price |
$9.95 |
Reviewer: |
|
Notes: | In Action #182 |
If you’ve spent any
appreciable visiting this website’s discussion group as well as the others
on the net, you’ve probably seen the frequent rantings of a few obnoxious
loudmouths who seem to feel that the universe will not be complete until there
is a decent kit of the McDonnell F2H-2 Banshee produced in 1/48 scale. Among the
most rabid and obnoxious of this crew of whiny reprobates is myself. My groans
will be posted on the boards every time a new kit is announced of yet another
P-47 or Bf 109, or a “Luft ‘46” napkin-doodle, or some obscure Polish biplane,
while the Korean War veteran F2H-2 Banshee is overlooked yet again. There are
four airplanes that we absolutely need new kits of in 1/48, and IMHO
these would all be good sellers: the F2H Banshee, the T-28 Trojan, the Mirage
III/V family, and the F-5A/B/T-38 family.
Oh, there’s a 1/48 Banshee of sorts on the market, Testor’s repop of the ancient
Hawk kit, first tooled shortly after the crust of the Earth cooled. Aside from
its Eisenhower-administration-era level of detailing (which is to say, none),
the old Hawk Banshee has another major failing: It is an F2H-1 variant, not the
more interesting, longer, tip-tank-carrying, Korean War veteran F2H-2.
Now any real modeler worth his Tenax should be able to convert the wretched old
Hawk -1 into a decent -2, right? Well, maybe he could if he could find
some good drawings of an F2H-2. I’ve been looking for a set for years with no
luck. In fact, up to now, I’ve only found two references of any kind on the F2H,
an older Ginter book that’s mainly useful for paint and markings schemes, and
the 1/72 Airfix F2H-2/-2P kit, which is the only thing available to give you any
hint of where the Banshee’s panel lines are. (Of course, “generic” Naval
Aviation and/or Korean War books always have a few Banshee photos; the best of
these is probably the old Squadron/Signal book USN/USMC in Korea.)
Squadron/Signal to the rescue--at long last! Their new volume #1182 tells the
Banshee story in the now-familiar “In Action” format, with adequate text, a few
color paintings and profiles, and lots and lots of good B&W photos. As a bonus,
the Banshee’s predecessor from McDonnell, the FD-1/FH-1 Phantom, is also
covered--briefly, but about as well as you’re likely to find anywhere.
Detail pics are not usually the “In Action” series’ forte, and this book follows
format, but there is a drawing of the ejection seat and a couple of partial
cockpit photos (looks like it’s all black in there to me, maybe with an interior
green floor). A few main landing gear details can be seen in one photo of an
F2H-3’s wingfold mechanism.
Some of the loudest members of the “Give us a Banshee model!” posse are Canadian
modelers, as Canada operated the final Banshee variant, the F2H-4. They might be
a bit disappointed in this book, as it devotes just two pages and four photos
(plus one color profile) to the Canadian Banshees. (Actually, Canadian
Banshee fans have had a very nice, large, hardcover book on the Canadian Banshee
that has been out for at least ten years. It is HIGHLY recommended. Ed) For
the rest of us, the photographic coverage of the USN/USMC use of the F2H-1
through -4, including Korean War service and photorecon and nightfighting
versions, will be most welcome. At least and at last we have some fairly good
sets of 3-view drawings to work with! (Although I have to say that I don’t think
the -2N profile drawings look right at all--compare the drawing on page 8 with
the photo on page 24 to see what I’m talking about.)
Warts and all, this book is a most welcome addition to Squadron’s “In Action”
line, and I heartily recommend it to any modeler with any interest whatever in
the F2H. Now, where did I put that old Hawk Banshee kit?
Model on!
--Snake
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