Pacific Coast Models 1/32 Spitfire IXc
KIT: |
Pacific Coast Models 1/32 Spitfire IXc |
KIT #: |
32005 |
PRICE: |
$59.95
MSRP |
DECALS: |
Six options |
REVIEWER: |
Tom Cleaver |
NOTES: |
Molded by Sword |
The Spitfire IX, began life as an “interim” development
of the Spitfire V - which itself was an interim development from the Spitfire I
- pending the full development and introduction of the Spitfire VIII, with its
airframe properly redesigned to take the increase in power offered by the
Merlin-60 series with a two-stage supercharger. The reason for the urgency was
the appearance of the Focke-Wulf Fw-190A, which o completely outclassed the
Spitfire V that equipped nearly all squadrons in Fighter Command that Wing
Commander Al Deere said the Spitfire was only superior in the turn, and “turning
doesn’t win victories!”
Introduced in mid-1942, by the summer of 1943 the
Spitfire IX had given the RAF back equality of equipment vis-a-vis the two
Luftwaffe Geschwadern on the Channel Front, while their increasing numbers
eventually provided air superiority.
Interestingly, these two closely-related “interim” types
accounted for more than half of all Spitfires produced during the Second World
War, with the Spitfire IX beating out its progenitor by a nose to become the
most-produced Spitfire sub-variant.
When Ken Lawrence of Pacific Coast Models first told me
last summer that he was contemplating releasing a Spitfire IX, I told him that
he would have to be willing to go the extra ten miles to be sure he “got it
right,” since there has never been a Spitfire IX in any scale that completely
captured the subtle shape of the Spitfire IX.
Since then,
Czech Master Resin has come out with a Merlin-60 Spitfire series that offers
dead-on accuracy for the high price they charge for their full-resin kits.
When I opened the box, I could tell at a glance that Ken
had indeed walked the extra twelve miles.
In fact, it looks like a scaled up CMR kit - which is
unsurprising when you discover that the designer of the CMR kits had an
important hand in the design of this kit.
Putting the parts on drawings, and doing the various
measurements that Bruce Archer used in his analysis of the Hasegawa Spitfire, it
is clear that the kit is the most accurate Spitfire IX kit in a scale larger
than 1/72.
The plastic airframe parts are molded by Sword and have
a nice shiny finish, with petite engraved panel lines.
The resin cockpit interior will provide one of the most
detailed Spitfire cockpits ever.
The interior detail is finished off with a good
photo-etch set by Eduard that provides instrument panels and multi-part seat
belts.
The clear plastic parts are thin and free of distortion and there should
be no problem posing the canopy in the open position.
The resin wheels provide both the “solid” and five-spoke
centers.
Resin exhausts for the early “fishtail” and later “tube” exhausts are
provided.
The upper wings have the cannon covers separate, which will make
things easy for the coming Spitfire IXE and Spitfire XVI, and the likely
Spitfire VII and VIII kits. The two cannon covers are the large teardrop for
the early-production Spitfire IX (known as the Spitfire IXB) and a second
bulged cover that is apparently for the
late-production IXC. The third cover has separate bulges which can be placed
inboard or outboard as the occasion merits to do either the "C" or the "E"
wing.
Decals cover six
aircraft: WZ-JJ pf the 309th
FS, 31st
FG in Italy; MK392/JE-J flown by Wg Cdr J.E. "Johnnie" Johnson at Normandy
(not as OC of the Kenley Wing - that was the year before); PT396/EJ-C of Wg
Cdr Jack Charles, RCAF, 1944; EN315/ZX-6, an early-production Spitfire IXB
flown by Wg Cdr Stanislaw Skalski in Tunisia (which uses the small intake,
not the tropical intake the profile shows); MM.4095/5-19 of 8th
Grupo, AMI in 1947; and "Red 2" of the Red Air
Force. Full stenciling for one aircraft is provided, and all decals are of
high quality. It should be noted that the "Sky" color of the ID codes is not
a correct color; a modeler should replace these if possible or change the
shade of the spinner and fuselage band to match. Also, the US insignia for
WZ-JJ is completely inaccurate, as shown on the profile instructions, which
is right; a modeler wanting to do this aircraft should obtain other decals
for the national insignia.
Finally!!
An accurate Spitfire IX out of the box that doesn’t
require a recalculation of the national debt to afford it!
I told Ken Lawrence if he got this right he’d have a
licence to print money, and I can hear the presses spinning up from here. Be
sure which version of Spitfire you are doing by checking photo references, so
you get it right as to use of the large or small intake, the fishtail or tube
exhausts, the wheels, and the cannon covers.
This is not a difficult kit, and will provide an
excellent model out of the box, while allowing a modeler to go to town on
creating a more highly-detailed model.
I’m sure every “Spit Boffin” will get more than one of
these, and is already looking forward to the coming releases.
Highly recommended.
Review kit courtesy of
Pacific Coast Models.
Get yours at www.pacmodels.com
If you would like your product reviewed fairly and quickly, please
contact
me or see other details in the
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