Azur 1/32 Bloch 152
KIT #: |
A060 |
PRICE: |
$56.15
|
DECALS: |
Three options |
REVIEWER: |
Bill Koppos |
NOTES: |
Unexpected Subject |

The rather undistinguished career of the Bloch fighters began on 17
July 1936, when the prototype MB150 refused to part company with the ground
on it's first attempted test flight. Due to the desperate need for fighters
to combat the Nazi threat, the design was modified and tried again.
Underpowered engines were the main problem facing French aircraft designers
at this time, but finally a 920 HP Gnome-Rhone 14 radial got the short nosed
plane airborne. Now overheating became a problem, as the cowling had been
made very small and tight fitting to decrease drag (see the Focke-Wulf
FW190). Various cowl/spinner combos
were
tried throughout the Bloch's career, but the problem was never completely
eradicated. Production began with the designation MB151, output initially
being very low. The MB151 was still too slow and further modifications to
engine, wings and cowl resulted in the MB152, which could finally carry the
2-cannon and machine gun armament that was it's best strong point. When
airframe production at last picked up, many were grounded for lack of
propellers! There seemed no end to the problems of the French aircraft
industry.
When Blitzkreig hit there were 7 Groups fully or partially equipped
with Bloch variants. These were quickly involved in the furious fighting,
strengths being good handling, heavy armament and ability to take a lot of
battle damage, slow speed and climb rate and very short endurance the
minuses. The worst problem was the lack of early warning, many French units
caught low and slow trying to take off on short notice as the 109's and
Dorniers swept in to attack their airfields. Several French pilots did well
on the Bloch152, Sous Lt. Robert Thollon scoring 8 and Louis Delfino 6 kills
with it. Accounts vary, some giving the Bloch units a 2 to 1 victory ratio,
but in the end it did not matter as the Germans were not going to be stopped
in France. After the surrender the Bloch was a main fighter in the European
Vichy Air Force, as they lacked the range to escape to North Africa as other
types did. Marcel Bloch went on to much better things, changing the name of
his outfit postwar to Dassault, you know, the Mirage people.
A 1/32 kit of the Bloch 152 was totally unexpected to me. I picked
this up at the IPMS Nationals in a package deal with the 1/32 Finnish
Brewster B-239 release, being very surprised to see it. I did have the
Classic Airframes 1/48 kit and the interest to build it but never got round
to it, now I had the urge to do a Bloch, and as Scott said, it looked easy
enough. See Scott's
preview for sprue, resin and photo-etched shots.
Panel lines are finely represented in the usual soft grey Azur/MPM
plastic, and some nice rivet detail is present. The resin cowl is
beautifully done looking much like the Pacific Coast Macchi 200's. The
engine is also a very nice replica. The etched fret has just the good stuff,
a seat harness and some brackets to enhance the pilot seat. Decal sheet is
large and colorful, and includes 3 battle of France aircraft. One is a
machine flown by Robert Thollon, and I picked this one. On to Bloch
building.
First let me say my references were limited on this aircraft, so I figured
this one would be a good choice for keeping simple, being done mainly Out of
Box. The one pic I did find showed the cockpit/seat setup to be pretty
accurate, and looked busy enough when painted up. The seat has etched braces
that help it, and I used Humbrol buff, dirtied with pastels, to simulate the
canvas seat and seat back. The instrument panel had nicely raised detail to
paint, and before you know it the fuselage was together. The "scallop"
windows on the fuselage spine are molded as a clear part of the fuselage
spine, a nice touch. I added strips to represent the canopy slide rails as
per photos, these running between the small teardrop-shaped fairings the kit
provides. So far so good. This happy scene would soon change.
Wing assembly was next, the wheel well insert fit well. Now the
warning. When installing the framing pieces on the wheel well insert, if you
install them as it looks in the plan you will Bloch (block) up the areas
where the gear legs are supposed to retract into. Don't do as I did, and
notice this after the glue is thoroughly dry. I could not remove them at
this point and had to trim the crap out of them to result in a real looking
setup. Before glueing, make sure they follow the gear leg cutouts in the
wing bottom. Now I encountered the kit's big faux pas (that's French). When
trying to install the wing, I found the left side fuselage root to be
warped, upturned considerably. Plotting how to fix this, I settled on gluing
the left top wing portion to the
root,
reinforce with styrene strips, let dry completely, then glue the bottom wing
to the top. After this dried, I was able to pull down the assembled left
wing, glue the central bottom and right top wing on. The right top did not
now match the bottom very well, and the panel lines do not match up, but
there was nothing to be done about it. The left wing also has a permanent
twist downward to the trailing edge that is noticeable if stared at.
Hopefully for you folks this warp was peculiar to my sample, but it's
something to be aware of.
Onward. The stabilizers looked quite thick, a common thing with
these big MPM products. I thinned them out by planing them on some 120 grit
sandpaper laid flat on the table. A few minutes of this treatment, and they
now are the same thickness of the bosses on the fuselage. The elevators are
separate, I thinned these also, and glued them both in a slightly drooped
position ,as per photos. At this point I built the engine. Pushrods were
made from styrene rod and put on as per reference pics, but I did not go
nuts here as not much of the moteur can't be seen once the cowl and prop are
on. A shame as this is a neat looking engine. I recommend shaving the rear
of the engine casting down to the cylinders, even cutting into them a bit,
for the correct seating depth in the cowling, otherwise your prop will stick
out too far. Consult those Bloch pictures you have, and test fit frequently.
I Painted the cylinders black and crankcase and pushrods grey. Now the
cowling can be attached. The kit allows nicely for the unique offset to port
that was a Bloch152 torque-fighting feature. I thinned the cooling flaps
along the sides, where the protrude from the fuselage. The front ring is a
hair small but can be carefully installed to look good. The Spitfire-type
under wing oil cooler was built and installed, and...
All seams sanded, cockpit, scallop windows and engine masked,
it's time for the paint shop. French WW2 camo schemes are fun to paint, as
they were as varied as the painters at the factory. Some Bloch fighters had
really jazzy 3 color dos, but as none of my refs gave me a detailed enough
look at these, I elected to work from the color 3 view provided. I used
Model Master
enamels
all the way, my local shop having most of the French colors necessary.
These were French Dark Blue grey, French Light Blue Grey for the unders,
French Chestnut (Brown) and I cheated by using RAF Dark green as a
substitute for the proper French color. The under color was applied first,
then I freehanded the rest working from lightest to darkest. The results
pleased me, the French greys being particularly pleasing to the eye. I then
post shaded the panel lines on bottom with a dark grey mix, and on top with
a grey/Umber mix, liking much how this turned out. Shooting it all with
Metallizer Sealer as a glosscoat, decaling could begin 20 minutes later.
These decals were a very pleasant surprise, going on and
snuggling down with NO setting solution. I still can't get used to this,
having had to drench decals with solvaset for years to get them to conform.
I usually paint rudder stripes of this kind, but this time the decals were
used, meeting up nicely on both sides of the rudder.VERY good decals, these.
Now my water-soap-acrylic black wash could be applied to the panel lines and
control separations, and smeared around the engine and wheel wells to
simulate combat grime. A further glosscoat was added to seal the decals and
wash, then finish with testor's Dullcoat to flatten things. The decals
looked really "painted on".
Time for the landing gear. This is an area where I could find no
close-up pictures for details or brake lines, etc. so I winged it. At least
the strut attachment points are substantial, but where the retraction
cylinders anchor is anybody's guess. I put mine on behind the struts and
attached the other end to a convenient rib in the wheel well. Angles of
struts and wheels were done using pics as a guide. The wheels angle out kind
of like the Morane 406. OF COURSE after the glue was well dry I started
thinking the model was sitting a bit high, and despite staring at Bloch 152
photos for weeks, I realized too late that at least 1/8th inch could be
shaved off the struts and gear doors to make it sit right. Your choice. In
the rear, this thing had a tail SKID, not a tail wheel, a'la a
latter-day
SPAD13. Were they saving Francs or weight or what? A tailskid on a machine
likely to be flown from muddy grass fields seems backward to me.
I assembled the resin prop hub, blades and spinner without glue
and test fit this. The spinner looked too large to me based on photos. I
glued a shaft in the rear and chucked it in a dremel tool, using a blade
edge to lathe it down to an acceptable profile. The sizes of the spinners in
the pictures seemed to vary, maybe they were different according to the
propeller used or the supplier.
The two gun sights are things of beauty. The reflector site is
well done and provided with a photo-etch frame and clear film that looks
quite realistic. The spindly outer metallic sights are an etched part that
looks really slick if you can survive the bending process. I masked the very
simply framed canopy and windscreen and painted these, the windscreen a very
nice fit. I could not resist adding the grab handle at the top of the
windscreen. Imagine my shock when the sliding canopy sat almost perfectly
where it belonged with no pressure and staying put with white glue. Thank
you Azur. Another problem from scarce refs occurred when trying to figure
out where to put the 7.5mm machine gun holes in the wings. I settled on the
location you see here. The extra-long 20mm cannons were hollowed out and
loaded, this thing really looking mean now. The resin exhausts were painted
Metallizer Exhaust, pitot tube camo and copper. A nice advantage to French
fighters is there is no antenna wire, using instead a top and bottom
antenna, the bottom being retractable for landing. These were put in place
and Viola!
I was very happy with my French fighter. I never thought of this machine as
a looker, but it grew on me. The forward-placed cockpit, neat gunsights,
and cowling/spinner combo lend it a purposeful appearance. I can say now I
am a confirmed Blochhead. The camo colors make me want to do another Armee
d'el Air subject, maybe a Morane 406, perhaps. I can't say this one was easy
due to the wing problems, but there is always something of this kind on
limited-run models. This one is definitely do-able by those with experience
in this type of kit. Maybe yours won't have the warpage problem.
Kit courtesy of me being at the 2008 Nationals and spending too
much.
Oh, and my apologies for the stupid Bloch puns.
French Aces of WW2 Barry Ketley Osprey Auircraft of the Aces #28
Fighters over France and the Low Countries Mushroom red Series # 5104
French Aircraft 39-42 Volume 1 Amiot to Curtiss
French Fighters in Action Squadron Signal Pub.
Bill
Koppos
December 2008
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