Airfix 1/72 Spitfire Mk.I
KIT #: | 1316 |
PRICE: | £ |
DECALS: | One option |
REVIEWER: | Spiros Pendedekas |
NOTES: | 2003 recreation of the original 1955 kit, utilizing the 1979 tooling |
HISTORY |
The Supermarine Spitfire is a British single-seat fighter aircraft used by the Royal Air Force and other Allied countries before, during, and after World War II. It was the only British fighter produced continuously throughout the war. The Spitfire remains popular among enthusiasts. Around 70 remain airworthy, and many more are static exhibits in aviation museums throughout the world.
THE KIT |
Airfix
came in 1955 with their first 1/72 Spitfire which itself looked like a
pantographed version of the 1954 Aurora “British Spitfire”. That Airfix offering
was molded in a lovely blue plastic and sold in a bag. The company decided to
recreate it in 2003, by molding its 1979 Spitfire Mk1a in the same color blue
styrene and using the same packing (in a bag, with the header having the
instructions printed overleaf). Though to my understanding, it was also sold
separately, this subject kit of this preview was part of the Airfix “100 Years
of Flight Centenary Gift Set” that contained six planes. This set was bought
second hand in 2019 for a mere $30.
Upon opening the
Spitfire kit bag, I was greeted with just 26 styrene parts arranged in two
sprues and molded in the same lovely blue color of the initial edition. The age
of the 1979 tooling is clearly evident with soft details, a few sink marks and
some roughness on some mating areas. Interestingly, not that much flash is
present. Panel lines are a mixture of raised and recessed.
Cockpit is spartanic, only containing a seat, a pilot with a hole in his stomach
and a gunsight which is molded in non-transparent styrene. Landing gear is
sufficient and the same can be said for the exhausts, prop and radiator and oil
cooler. I liked that half wheels are provided in case you want to build a
wheels-up version and last, but certainly not least, a very nice base is
included with the Airfix logo imprinted on it.
The
canopy is clear but thick, the latter being more of a blessing than a curse, as
it may efficiently distort the cockpit’s sparsity. Instructions are printed
inside the bag header and are nice and clear. No color callouts are provided
throughout, so you have to resort to the net.
Only one
scheme is provided, of the fictitious RG904 machine carrying the equally
fictitious BT-K coding . No painting instructions are provided, but if you do
some net research, you can get your hands on the second (1956) or a follow-on
Airfix edition instructions that contain some interesting “painting
instructions” of dark green and khaki over sky. Equally interestingly, an 1/1
quite accurate static replica was built in 2009 and accordingly painted! This
replica is currently on display at the RAF Museum Cosford, Shropshire, UK and
can be used for reference. Decals are slightly off registered, but are otherwise
usable.
Instructions want you to first attach the seat with the pilot to the cockpit
floor and, together with the prop, trap them between the fuselage halves. The
wings and tailplanes are next, followed by the landing gear, the radiator and
the oil cooler, ending a simple, uncomplex build.
CONCLUSIONS |
Judged by modern
standards, the kit lacks, as the molds date back to 1979, and the off registered
decal sheet caters for a single, fictitious scheme. Clearly the kit has been
vastly superseded by many others, not to mention the newer tool Airfix one.
However, if seen as a
walk down memory lane, this is a quite effective and definitely worth tackling
recreation of the original 1955 kit (even if it utilizes the “newer” 1978 molds,
a reminder of the past where, as kids, we would gaze at all those bagged kits
with the colorful styrene, saving for them and impatiently putting them together
in an afternoon, with (whatever) painting being optional!
Happy Modeling!
Spiros
Pendedekas
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