KIT #: | 3401 |
PRICE: | €25 in 2007 |
DECALS: | One option |
REVIEWER: | Spiros Pendedekas |
NOTES: | Reboxed by Italeri in 2013 with nice decal options |
HISTORY |
The North American A-36 "Apache" (often incorrectly referred to as "Invader" as the aircraft was always just called the Mustang) was the ground-attack/dive bomber version of the P-51 Mustang, from which it could be distinguished by the presence of rectangular, slatted dive brakes above and below the wings. The type was actually a stopgap measure, intended to keep North American assembly lines running during the first half of 1942, despite the US having exhausted its funds earmarked for fighter aircraft. This proved to be a successful approach, since, upon the order coming for more P-51s in June 1942, the NAA workforce was thoroughly experienced. A total of 500 Apaches served in the Mediterranean and Southeast Asia theaters during World War II, making a significant contribution to the Allied war effort, before being withdrawn from operational use in 1944.
THE KIT |
Accurate Miniatures
came with their Allison P-51/A-36/Mustang I series in 1994, only making the
modeling world too happy, as, at last, they were offered a (for the times) state
of the art tolling of the Allison powered variants. The specific kit is the
original A-36 version, found still wrapped in 2007 at an Athens hobby shop,
carrying the “normal” price of €25. It was bought immediately, fearing that AM’s
demise would quickly deem it obsolete.
The
kit comes in the usual medium sized but relatively tall, good quality AM top
opening box, carrying a beautiful box art by the much missed aviation artist
Terrance J. Ryan, depicting the kit subject on a bombing/strafing mission.
Upon opening the box, I was greeted with 68 dark green styrene halves, arranged
in three sprues. Molding, which is made in Korea, is first class, nice and
crisp, with neither flash evident on any of the parts nor ejector pin marks
noted on visible areas. Well done AM! The plastic itself looks reminiscent of
Hasegawa offerings, tad on the hard side. Panel lines are finely recessed and
the riveting found on wing undersides is very realistically represented.
Fabric representation on rudder and elevators is tad pronounced but looks nice.
The ailerons are provided as aluminum, with riveted detail. Yours truly being
not a Mustang aficionado, I have read that at those early variants the ailerons
were fabric covered.
Cockpit is very well appointed and all parts realistically represented, with the
floor having the characteristic curved shape. The sidewall details are all
molded together in one piece for each side and look sufficient, as do the
“boxes” located aft of the seat. The instrument panel comes as a transparent
part, with molded on instruments, where an “instrument faces” decal is to be
affixed at its back and then painted black. No seat belts are provided.
The engine nose is provided separately, in order to cater for the Merlin
variants and, in order to avoid a possible step where the nose meets the
fuselage, I would take other builders words and attach each nose half to each
fuselage half first, ensuring a step-free joint, then mate the assembled
fuselage halves.
The otherwise precisely molded distinctive dive brakes are provided as one piece
with the upper wing halves in “closed” position, when the vast number of
modelers would prefer them to be provided separately. Taking into account the
high level of the rest of the kit detailing, this “unexpected” omission might be
partly explained from the fact that it was generally regarded that A-36 pilots
were not that fond of those dive brakes, not operating correctly, having them
often wired-shut.
However, it is lately exceedingly regarded that the “A-36 often wired-shut dive
brakes” story was more myth than reality, as war reports and interviews stated
that they gave the A-36A greater stability in a dive. Capt. Charles E. Dills,
522d Fighter Squadron, 27th FBG, XIIth Air Force, in a post-war interview,
stated that he flew the A-36 for 39 of his 94 missions, from 11/43 to 3/44, with
the dive brakes “never wired-shut in Italy in combat”.
Landing gear is finely represented with the bays and door innards looking well
detailed. The wheels are provided as “weighted” or “unweighted” with separate
rims and feature nicely molded diamond thread pattern. The inner "clam shell"
landing gear doors are said not to droop down upon engine shut down on those
early Allison Mustangs, so you may consider attaching them “up”.
Finally, the radiator intake, the exhausts, the one piece prop with separate
spinner, the bombs, guns and all other tiny bits provided look very well done.
Transparencies are well molded, crystal clear and not too thick. Instructions
come in the form of two double sided leaves, containing an introduction to the
kit, with the construction spread in six steps, some of them being dense. As our
Editor has pointed out in his similar Mustang IA kit preview,
the drawings are done by hand, which, in general, cannot be regarded as “bad”,
however they are at areas vague (for example, in positioning the radiator duct
and landing gear parts). The accompanying supportive text, on the other hand, is
very comprehensive. Color callouts are given where needed.
Only one
scheme is provided, of 27FG’s s/n 284071 bird, as it stood in Italy in Spring
1944, having performed 190 bomb runs. This bird was OD over neutral gray with
red spinner and carried a distinctive tally of the 190 bomb missions lavishly
painted all over the port fuselage. Decals look well printed and usable.
Regarding the yellow bands, you can take Tom Cleaver’s word and paint them.
Colors are provided in the form of a handy cross reference chart, featuring
generic names, FS numbers and recommended brands.
Instructions want you to first assemble the cockpit and sidewalls, then,
together with the rear wheel, trap them between the fuselage halves. The nose is
then to be assembled and attached (but, as mentioned above, better attach the
nose halves to each fuselage half and then close the fuselage). The prop is next
assembled, followed by the wings, tail planes, landing gear, exhausts, guns,
ordnance and transparencies, ending a simple and seemingly uncomplex build.
CONCLUSIONS |
Though getting elderly, this looks to be a very good
representation of the early A-36 variant. General shapes of parts look correct,
molding is nice and crisp, panel lines are finely recessed, details at all key
areas are sufficient and, apart from the separate nose that might need its extra
attention, the build is uncomplicated.
Decals look well printed and usable (apart, possibly, from the yellow ID wing
bands). It would be desirable to have at least another decal option offered,
these birds carried quite a few interesting schemes! Instructions, while
featuring a comprehensive text, lack in drawings, but we live in the net days,
so you can relatively effortlessly download the vastly superior Italeri ones
from this kit’s 2013 rebox.
If you own or come across one of these original AM A-36s, they are kits worth
tackling.
Happy modeling!
January 2023
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