Hasegawa 1/72 MiG-17 "Nguyen Van Bay"
KIT #: | 02864 |
PRICE: | $12.00 on 'that auction site' several years back |
DECALS: | Three options |
REVIEWER: | Richard F |
NOTES: | Reissue with additional parts |
HISTORY |
The skies over Vietnam in the mid-1960s were a tough place to be. A lot of
pilots from both sides lost their lives in that long war. This kit from Hasegawa
gives you the mount of one of the aces who survived the whole war: Nguyen Van
Bay.
Depending on who you believe, Nguyen Van Bay shot down 5 or 7 aircraft (the US
credits him with 5, his own country with 7).
His career didn't start so well. On 6 October 1965 a Sparrow from an F-4 nearly
hit his wing. He said "I felt like a light boxer who confidently walked up to
the ring and tried to knock out the super heavy boxers. It was not a single
fight but dozens of dogfights. We were outnumbered four or five to one. Our
thoughts were on survival, nothing more."
He hit his stride the following year and, according to the US, he went on to
shoot down two Crusaders, and one each of the Phantom, Skyhawk and Thunderchief.
Vietnam credits him with another two F-4s (one of which, so far as I can tell,
the US says was hit by ground fire). He was one of only three aces to fly the
MiG-17 on all his missions.
In recent years, Nguyen Van Bay, who is still alive, grew mangos and raised fish
near Ho Chi Minh city (once known as Saigon).
The MiG-17 he flew was one of the more than 10,000 of these nimble fighters
built. Better than the MiG-15, the -17 had more maneuverability and was a bit
faster. It packed two 23mm cannons and a monster 37mm cannon for good measure.
The MiG-17 was very widely used in Africa, Asia and the Middle East, as well as
in the USSR and China.
THE KIT |
This is a nice, early Hasegawa kit. It's made from a
good grey plastic, nicely moulded with a mix of raised and engraved panel lines.
Cockpit detail is very limited. The clear canopy is very nice.
The kit actually depicts a later model MiG-17PM/PFU (Fresco-E)
which had a small radar mounted in the nose above the air intake. The kit comes
with four basic renditions of the K-5 "Alkali" beam-riding missiles and their
distinctive launch rails.
To give you the earlier MiG-17A Fresco A, Hasegawa includes a nicely moulded
metal nose intake to backdate the plane. This is handy because it weighs a ton,
so there'll be no need for nose weight to keep this plane sitting on its gear.
The undercarriage is reasonably detailed - typical of earlier Hasegawa models.
Decals - there are decals for Nguyen Van Bay's aircraft of the North Vietnamese
Air Force. These decals don't look as good as you might expect from Hasegawa.
CONCLUSIONS |
A solid kit of the MiG-17 and, in this boxing, an interesting specific example to build.
Not wanting to hi-jack Richard's nice preview, but a couple of things
I noticed. One is that, aside from the new nose, this is the same MiG-17 as
originally kitted. That means it does not have the smaller speed brakes of the
MiG-17A nor does it have the correct canopy as the radar plane had a longer
windscreen with framework not found on the MiG-17A/F versions. I believe
the kit is also somewhat over-scale with tail planes that are a bit too small.
None of these should be deal breakers if you can find the kit at a reasonable
price and are not overly concerned about the differences. Ed
Richard F
March 2011
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