Eduard 1/72 R-3S/AA-2 Atoll-A
By Matt Bittner
My apologies, but I'm taking this straight from Wikipedia because it contains information I didn't know:
"During the Second Taiwan Strait Crisis in 1958, the Republic of China's (Taiwan) F-86 Sabres faced the much higher performance, mainland Chinese PLAAF MiG-17s. The MiGs had speed, maneuverability and altitude advantages over the Sabres, allowing them to engage only when they desired, normally at advantageous times. In response, the US Navy rushed to modify 100 of the ROC's Sabres to fit the newly introduced AIM-9 Sidewinder missile, the latest model being the "B" version. These were introduced into combat for the first time on 24 September 1958, when a group of MiG-17s cruised past a flight of Sabres, only to find themselves under attack by missile fire. This was the first instance of guided missiles being used in air-to-air combat.
"On 28 September 1958, a similar engagement resulted in one of the missiles becoming lodged in a MiG-17 without exploding, allowing it to be removed after landing. The Soviets later became aware that the Chinese had at least one Sidewinder, and after some wrangling, were able to convince the Chinese to send them one of the captured missiles. Gennadiy Sokolovskiy, later chief engineer at the Vympel team, said that "the Sidewinder missile was to us a university offering a course in missile construction technology which has upgraded our engineering education and updated our approach to production of future missiles."
"A subsequent claim was made by Ron Westrum in his book "Sidewinder" that the Soviets obtained the plans for the Sidewinder from Swedish Colonel and convicted spy Stig Wennerström, and rushed their version into service by 1961 copying it so closely that even the part numbers were duplicated. Although Wennerström did leak information of the Sidewinder after negotiating its purchase for Sweden, none of the known Soviet sources mention this, while all explicitly mention the Chinese example."
Fascinating.
This Eduard package (#672 104) comes with four missiles, four pylons and four seeker-head covers in resin, a photoetch fret (for the fins and exhaust-end) and a set of decals. If you decide you want to display your missiles with the seeker-heads covered you'll need to first remove the "regular" seeker-heads from the missiles and then add the seeker-head covers. After you glue on the photoetch front fins and then the exhaust ends you'll want to paint the missiles. These were white while the pylons were usually finished in whatever underside-color your model is finished in, or gray. After everything is painted then you'll want to add the supplied decals.
These are excellent aftermarket replacements – or additions, if your kit doesn't include any – for outfitting any Soviet/Russian aircraft with Atolls. Definite thanks sent to Eduard for the review package.