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Witold Urbanowicz was one of
the outstanding Polish aces. Although he
was a bit overscored by Stanislaw Skalski with his 18 individual
and 3 shared victories, Urbanowicz had at least four claims to
fame:
Since January 1940, Witold Urbanowicz had been in active service with the RAF, but as all other Poles at the time he was initially refused to join a fighter unit. This changed after the collapse of France, and he was posted to 145th Sqn RAF and scored two kills with it. In early September he joined the soon-to-become-famous Polish 303rd Squadron, took command of a flight and finally became the first Polish commander of the unit.
After scoring further 13 victories Urbanowicz was posted to staff duties in October 1940. Although by then he had occupied really high ranks within the Polish forces but what he really wanted was flying again. Despite the fact that he was moved to serve with the Polish embassy in USA in order to prevent him from further flying, Urbanowicz made arrangements with Claire Chennault and they both managed to obtain Polish authorities' approval for a "visit" to Chennault's Flying Tigers in China.
In China, Urbanowicz flew operationally with P-40s, willingly sharing his experience gained under the British sky. On December 11th, 1943 he downed two enemy aircraft recognized as "Zekes" but being more likely Ki-43s. Also during his stay in China he destroyed nine Japanese planes on the ground.
After the war Urbanowicz (luckily for him) chose not return to communist Poland and settled in the USA. He passed away in 1996.
It is somewhat ironic that the top three Polish fighter aces: Skalski, Urbanowicz and Gladych were so dramatically different. It is not a secret that they did not even like each other. This was not because of the scoring rivalry, but rather the deep differences in their background and personality. Urbanowicz had aristocratic manners. On the ground he was very modest and quiet, possibly going along well British RAF officers at the time. On the other hand he probably kept personal distance from his squadron mates. In the air he was aggressive but errorless. He was extremely intelligent and in a dogfight could realize fully how the situation was developing around him. None of his aircraft was ever damaged in combat.
Skalski was simple minded, self-confident and a bit conceited person. In the air he was cold and effective, probably not much different from Urbanowicz. But on the ground he was like those other crazy people: live fast until the end will come.
Gladych was a mysterious guy. Constant mutineer, he prompted sincere dislike from his commanders. Being reluctant lone wolf within the Polish Air Force he joined USAAF and separated from the Polish community in Britain for good.

During his brief career with 145th Sqn, Urbanowicz flew several Hurricanes. After joining the 303rd Sqn he did not have a designated aircraft until late September, when he chose this Hurricane, P3901 RF-E. He had scored nine kills flying it. Frankly, I haven't seen any photo of this particular aircraft, but its profile can be found in various publications. I believe that at least someone saw a photo before drawing the profile, huh? Anyway I chose this plane as the subject of my model.
I used the obvious choice of Hasegawa's Hurricane Mk I as a base for the model. But when it came to aftermarket goodies I showed some extraordinary prodigality. I had bought a lot of Polish and Czech upgrade sets in order to compare them, and finally I took best details from various sets:
(Now my second unsuspecting Hurricane kit will be fitted with all the worse details ;o)
Some details in the cockpit were also scratchbuilt as well as the wing landing lights. 0.06mm fishing line was adapted to simulate antenna wire.

Painting was the real fun part. The cockpit interior was painted with Humbrol 78 Interior Green. The undercarriage and its bays were sprayed with SnJ aluminium.
The entire model was then painted with Humbrol 29 Dark Earth. For the camouflage pattern, I applied masks cut from Xerox paper and adhered to bits of double-sided tape. It provided the mask positioned in a subtle distance from the model surface, thereby producing slightly soft edges of colour when spraying. The dark green shade was taken straight out of a Humbrol 163 can (my favourite RAF Dark Green equivalent). Finally, the bottom surfaces received one or two coats of Humbrol 90 Sky.
All RAF roundels and fin flashes were painted with Aeromaster and Tamiya acrylics using Tally Ho vinyl masks. The Tallly Ho masks performed reasonably well, but I won't use them again. The foil used by Tally Ho and Eduard for their masks does not stick to the surface well enough.
The aircraft codes RF-E were airbrushed with Humbrol 64 light gray through my own custom made vinyl masks which proved to be far superior. The 303rd Sqn badge was printed by Charlie Donath from Exactdecals using ALPS printer, the serial number P3901 and the nose "E" letter were printed on my Canon BJC 7100 ink-jet on the Microformat ink-jet decal paper.
The entire aircraft received a coat of Future Floor Wax. Then, Pebeo artist oils were used to simulate weathering. Lastly, the Aeromaster Flat Clear mixed with Future gave the model its final matt appearance.

Additional images, click to enlarge
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