|

Among 1/72 modellers, the liited series of aircraft kits in this scale that
Tamiya released during recent years posess an aura of excellence. Indeed,
all of these kits are prefectly engineered and easy to assemble, but
the Messerschmitt Bf 109E is in a class of its own. It is ingenious in
its simplicity. Contained on but a single sprue of grey plastic, this
kit has only a few parts, but makes a perfect replica of the aircraft.
I have built a couple of them already and I plan to do many more. Emil
is such a graceful subject with all this variety of colour schemes.
Construction
This kit simply falls together. However I describe it's excellent
fit it's not enough. Believe me, I didn't use any filler, only a little
of Gunze Mr. Surfacer 1000.
The Tamiya cockpit is OK, but will benefit from some extra detailing
especially on the sidewalls which are moulded in shallow relief on the
inside of the fuselage halves. This time I decided not to use the Aires
cockpit resin, but opted for scratchbuilding some interior
details and use the excellent photoetched set by Part from Poland. The
set is really exhaustive and contains almost everything what is
necessary to build a little "one'o'nine" replica.
Construction photos showing cockpit interior, Peil IV antenna under the
fuselage
and Squadron canopy in place. Click to enlarge.
The project commenced with the cockpit. Its walls were detailed
using photoetched items. For the seat I have retained the kit part,
only modified it slightly. When completed and detailed I had painted
the interior with RLM 02 gray colour using Testors Authentic. The
instrument panel was painted RLM 66 black-grey. The next step was to
paint all switches, levers and equipment inside the cockpit, for which
I used red, yellow, blue and black acrylics.
The painted interior then received a wash of Vallejo patina glaze
mixed with water and soap. Then followed some dry-brushing to highlight
the protruding detail, followed by a final coat of clear matt
varnish.
Wheel wells and undercarriage struts received some extra details
from the Part set. The wire was used to make a brake lines. Wheels were
painted black, then I applied some brown wash onto the discs and some
gray wash covered the tires.

Although Tamiya provides a three-part poseable canopy as good as the
injection plastic can be, I opted for a vacuformed canopy made by
Squadron. This comes in one piece and I had to cut the moveable part to
open the cockpit.
As I wanted to model the aircraft of II/(J)LG2 flown by Herbert
Ihlefeld, I added the Peil IV antenna blister under the fuselage. The
blister was shaped of Milliput epoxy putty.
Painting
The inspiration was the Third Group Decals sheet, JG 77 / LG2.
Ihlefeld's aircraft was one of the most colorful Emils I have ever seen.
The choice was right. First I had painted the nose and rudder with
Aeromaster RLM 04 Yellow. A few thin layers layed one by one guaranteed
the solid, smooth and delicate surface.
Then I masked off the yellow areas and started to apply camouflage
colours. For this I decided to use Xtracolour enamels exclusively.
These are the best enamels I had used with an airbrush, very sprayable
and featuring extremely fine pigment. The undersurfaces and fuselage
sides were painted RLM 65 blue. Then some masking was done and the
uppersurface colours were applied. What is really amazing is that Third
Group Decals states that hese should be in RLM 74/75 grays, colours
usually associated with later aircraft. The fuselage spine was painted
then the RLM 74 Greengray was applied on the wings.

The wings of this machine are claimed to have been painted in RLM74
with irregular squiggles of RLM 75. As you can see, the contrast
between these two colours on the model is too low, sligtly spoiling
this interesting paint scheme.
Ihlefed's machine carried interesting camouflage on the wings. It
looks like RLM 74 with some freehand RLM 75 overspray and mottles. My
mistake was to paint them freehand too. The contrast between RLM 74 and
75 is too low and the sprayed squiggles are unfortunately hardly
visible. I should have painted them using masks… The next step was to
apply complicated fuselage mottled pattern. I had lowered the pressure
in my compressor, thinned the paint more than usual and started to
paint them carefully. At the end I had oversprayed the tail according
to the decals references. The swastika on that plane was left on the
patch of RLM 65 blue while the fin and the rudder was painted red. The
same red triangles are visible on the stabilizers. I painted it with
Aeromaster RLM 23 red.

When the paint job was completed I started to apply the decals over
the smooth gloss surface. A coat of clear gloss is not necessary when
you use Xtracolours. Third Group Decals were of excellent quality,
nicely conforming to the model's surface. And now it was time for…
Weathering
I really enjoy it! Weathering, making a model look like a real thing
not a toy. I love heavy oil and exhaust stains, dust, dirt covering
models. Some say my weathering is to strong. Maybe.. but I like
it.
I covered the entire model with Aeromaster Clear Gloss and went
about darkening the panel lines first. I had used black/dark gray
artist oil. Some stains under the wings and behind the radiators were
made with the same technique. Then the model was resprayed with clear
matt and dry pastels were used to apply exhaust stains, tire dirt and
so on. Some oil stains were done with a dry pastel then touched with
wet fine brush.
At the end I covered the entire model with semigloss acrylic laquer.
Few final details were placed and the Bf 109 was done.
I really love the kit, it is the excellent base for more detailing
project as well as "out of the box" simple model. I'm going
to make a bigger "Emil collection". My next one will be E-1
"Kanalkampf Jager". Or maybe... well anyway it will be
another Tamiya Bf 109.
Additonal images, click to enlarge
|