Kombrig 1/700 HMS Duncan
KIT #: | 70265 |
PRICE: | around 48 Euros |
DECALS: | not required |
REVIEWER: | Frank Spahr |
NOTES: | Resin kit |
HISTORY |
The Duncan-class of British battleships were specifically designed to counter the threat of the Russian Peresviet Class of battleships and their estimated speed of 19 knots. So this class of ships had the same armament as preceding classes, but a stronger powerplant, less displacement and reduced armour protection. They reached the projected 19 knots, but the design was considered unsatisfactory due to the reduced size and poor disposition of their armour. Moreover, the Russian ships actually only reached 18 knots and only had 10 inch main guns instead of 12 inch with the British. So it was until the advent of the battlecruiser, several years later, that ships with focus on speed and armament, but with lack of protection were built.
Of the six ships in the class, Montagu was lost after grounding on Lundy Island in 1906, whilst Russell was lost to a mine in 1916 and Cornwallis to torpedo hits in 1917, both off Malta.
HMS Duncan was laid down at Thames Iron Works in Blackwall in 1899 and commissioned in 1903. Prior to the war, she served on various stations and had been reduced to the Second Fleet as a training ship in 1913. Prior to the outbreak of hostilities, she had a refit and joined the Grand Fleet when war broke out. During the war, she served on various stations including the Adriatic and the Aegean. She was paid off in February 1917, to provide crews for anti-submarine vessels and from then on was kept in reserve, until she was sold for scrap in 1920. She was involved in two collisions: She collided with HMS Albion in Lerwick in 1905, and grounded off Lundy Island during the salvage operations after the grounding of Montagu.
THE KIT |
This is your typical Kombrig kit as Iīve already built several. Very neatly and intricately modeled on the drawings in R.A. Burtīs book on British Pre-Dreadnoughts, very neatly and finely cast, with oodles of fine resin parts, yet no PE. Pretty basic instructions, no decals, but a reasonable painting guide. All of it packed into a small and pretty flimsy cardboard box, so there was breakage, but luckily nothing that really counted.
Some parts - in my personal view - look better if replaced by machined brass, as in the gun barrels, and some are again in personal my view unusable in resin and need a metal replacement, as in the masts and yardarms, plus the boat davits. Having some good documentation and some generic PE plus brass parts will surely help in building.
CONSTRUCTION |
I got this kit from a friend who had decided he would quit building in such a small scale. At the time, at least ten years ago, I was still more active in 1:700, but the kit languished in my stash nonetheless. Only early in 2023 did I pull it out, on the rationale that my time to quit this scale is approaching now, too. So I started by selecting a suitable Trumpeter display box and mounted the hull onto it. Two screws glued into holes drilled into the hull and holes drilled through the base helped, and made for a stable mounting of the model during the building process. Having misted over the mounted hull with grey primer to determine its perimeter, I then sculpted what limited waves I wanted to show with the vessel moving through calm water.
That done, I applied white wall paint to the base in a stippling motion, let it dry thoroughly, and then sprayed the base with green and blue until I reached a satisfying and (to me) credible result. Now I let the base fully dry, before I applied white oil paint for the foam effects and then glosscoated it, and only then started on the ship in earnest.
Things intervened, and I frankly couldnīt be bothered to tackle this small and intricate model. In January 2024 I made a fresh start, and in retrospect the delay was a good idea. I for one canīt force myself to model successfully. I need to be in proper shape and frame of mind if the result shall be anything worthwhile.
So I gave the kit parts a fresh look and decided what to keep and what to replace and what to detail. As there is no dedicated PE set, I needed to use my stash of WEM PE sets for the period, namely those for HMS Tiger and HMS Chester, but I also stole from some others in my stash wherever it seemed convenient.
I decided to rebuild both bridges entirely, as they had canvas-covered railings and the molded-on ones were too solid for my liking. That took some effort but the end result looks more convincing to me. Mind you, as always your point of view may differ from mine, and thatīs entirely OK. Both ways.
I was lucky to find funnel caps that worked for the kit parts, which I had drilled out a tad. The barrels for the main and secondary artillery were replaced with conveniently-sized items by Master.
I rebuilt the masts from machined brass parts and PE and only retained the fighting tops and searchlights. That made for better and much-needed stability and would preclude warping.
To accommodate the torpedo net shelves, I added supports from thin stock styrene to the hull. The shelves themselves were pieced together from parts from the abovementioned PE sets. For the small guns on the deck below the boat deck I used PE 20 mm Oerlikons.
COLORS & MARKINGS |
Markings there are none on this model. But there was a lot of painting and masking going on. Duncan had for a short time sported the classic and classy Victorian livery, and that was what looked most appealing to me. With the black and white hull, wooden and linoleum and steel decks, and a white stripe at the waterline, I was kept busy. Stynylrez primer in both white and black helped well, like many times before. The rest are reasonably appropriate Vallejo shades. The model wasnīt weathered at all, except some very faint rust streaks below the anchors. Only the wooden decks and the boat interiors got a wash to let the lovely details stand out.
FINAL CONSTRUCTION |
Having my subassemblies ready, it was time to bring them together. Which includes rigging, which is easily my least favourite task in modeling. But I had a new tool to try in this case .06 mm Modelkasten wire. This is a very fine wire with a dull and greyish surface, which is sold rolled up, but will straighten out once unrolled and keep that straight shape. I assume itīs some kind of Nitinol alloy as itīs used on root canal instruments. That material is quite forgiving and tough, and glues well with medium CA glue. It doesnīt need painting in my experience, which is an added bonus. The only downside is that you canīt tension it, like you do with stretched sprue or UNI Caenis thread both of which get more tension by (very carefully) applying heat.
So I tested the material on the funnel stays, and was quite happy with the result. From then on it was mainly a matter of finding the amount of concentration and dedication to achieve a passable result to complete the model. As always, I worked from the center to the periphery to minimize collateral damage. So the bridges were added after the funnels and their stays. Then came the boats using PE cradles from my stock. Followed by inclined ladders, any railings on that level and the masts. Having added the masts, I added the rigging, leaving out the fore stays for now. For the ratlines I used the leftovers from the GMM sheet for my Mauretania project.
Having got so far, I added the torpedo nets, using conveniently-sized thread infused with PVA glue and painted. Now came the remaining parts for the fore and aft decks. I pieced together the railings and then added the stern walk I had prepared earlier, leaving the aft main gun turret off for now. I drilled a hole in the aft barbette, and threaded a screw into it. That would be used for manipulating the model onto its base at the very end.
I used the kit anchors after some cleanup, and also used the molded on anchor chains, only adding some stoppers from PE chain. PE chain was also used for the outboard anchor chains.
Having added flagstaffs and a flag decal from my stocks, the model was almost complete. I now proceeded to add the torpedo net booms from .1 mm wire, but refrained from adding more rigging for them. Then came the outboard davits and a bit of rigging for them, using PE parts from the HMS Chester sheet. A number of Lion Roar PE figures were added only at this stage. I might have done it earlier. Then came the forestays.
Now followed some paint touchups and checks, before I misted a generous flat coat over the entire model to blend things in and hide as many flaws as possible.
That cured, I opened the vise that had held the model over the building process, held the model by the screw protruding from the aft barbette, and placed it on the completed base. Having secured it with the screws from below, I could remove the barbette screw and finally add the rear turret, completing the build.
CONCLUSIONS |
Getting this one done was a step forward in getting over the burnout that led to my retirement. I was rather pleased with the Modelkasten wire, and I like the overall look of the model in its very late Victorian livery. It doesnīt take up much display space and is a bit of an achievement.
REFERENCES |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Duncan_(1901)
Burt, R.A.: British Battleships 1889-1904. New revised edition. Barnsley 2013
Dingle, Nicholas: British Warships 1860-1906, a Photographic Record. Barnsley 2009
Gibbons, Tony: The complete Encyclopedia of Battleships and Battlecruisers. London 1983
Frank Spahr
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