Tamiya 1/100 Me-262 & Me-163
KIT #: | 61604 |
PRICE: | $10 or so 'used' |
DECALS: | Two options |
REVIEWER: | Spiros Pendedekas |
NOTES: | 2004 reissue |
HISTORY |
The Me-262 and Me-163 are milestones in aviation history, not only due to being the first operational jet-engined and rocket-powered aircraft respectively, but also because both were technological accomplishments, each in its own way, with their overall design presenting significant advanced features, such as the swept wings, with the Me-163 not having horizontal stabilizers at all! The Me-262 is generally regarded as a great dogfighter, whereas the Me-163, despite its many idiosyncrasies, presented a certain degree of potential and effectiveness, especially taking into account the actual (in many ways restricting) conditions in which those planes had to operate.
THE KIT |
It
was late 60s-early 70s when Tamiya started to present their very nice 1/100 line
of kits, this one first issued in 1972, then reboxed another two times, in 1974
and 2004. The specific kit is that final reboxing, given as a gift from my
beloved local modeling club to my young sons in 2024. It comes in a small,
excellent quality top opening box, carrying a very attractive box art of the two
fighters flying together.
Upon opening the box, I was greeted with 49 light gray styrene parts, arranged
in three equally sized sprues. Molding is excellent with no flash noted, with
panel lines being a combination of very finely done raised and recessed and
general shapes of parts looking accurate.
Despite the fact that, due to the nature of these kits, there’s not much in the
cockpits other than plain seats, the nice looking pilots provided will fill the
areas sufficiently. Landing gear for both kits is adequately represented, as are
the distinctive Jumo engines of the Me-262. Tamiya beautifully supplies three
ball bearings as nose weight for the Me-262. Finally, a very nice base is
provided, so you can depict both fighters in a sort of flying formation.
Transparencies are very well molded and crystal clear. Instructions are nice,
coming in the form of a small pamphlet, containing a short history of the types,
a color reference chart, with the construction logically spread in 5 main steps,
each one containing a couple of substeps, all nice and clear.
Two nice
schemes are provided for each aircraft, all in RLM70/71/65. With the exception
of the “white” sections looking “ivory” decals are superbly printed and still
looking in good condition with little yellowing (which might hardly show onto
the camo). The decals are politically correct, meaning you will have to source
swastikas from spares, if you want your models to be historically correct.
Instructions want you to first assemble the Me-262 fuselage, trapping the seat,
rear bulkhead and nose weight in between, then attach the wing, tail planes,
canopy, landing gear (ground or flight), engines and canopy. If you resist the
temptation to depict the Me-262 in “clean” configuration, you can add the bombs
provided.
The Me-163 construction is next, which is as simplistic as the real bird is,
basically trapping the seat and pilot between the fuselage halves, then adding
the wings, dashboard, canopy and landing skid (and wheels, if depicted on the
ground).
Clearly, construction of both planes is totally uncomplicated and very pleasant
even for a novice.
CONCLUSIONS |
Unless you are
scale-oriented, it is really hard to pass over this little dual combo gem:
overall shapes of parts for both models look accurate, molding is super,
construction is uncomplex and instructions are great as are the decals.
Still (2024) not extremely hard to find and offered at cheap prices, if you want
an easy, pleasant dual build (let alone introducing a youngster to modeling)
this is a kit worth tackling.
Happy Modeling!
Spiros Pendedekas
February 2024
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