Building the Pro-Modeler 1/48 Focke Wulf-190
By Tony Goetz
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Introduction This kit is the DML kit, as you easily can see with the two side by side. There may be some minor retooling, but it's still the same kit. One change is that Pro-Modeler doesn't include the brass detail sheet, which included the turtledeck, seat belts, some armor plates in the cockpit, and the instrument panels. They have been replaced, though, with incredibly detailed plastic instrument panels, and other pieces that are probably better suited as injection molded. There are probably also some other changes, but this was the main one I saw. While looking over the pieces, I noticed that there weren't any clear parts. I guess that Fuselage assembly The first step in building this kit was assembling the cockpit interior. All pieces are The cowl is molded in five pieces (top, bottom, right/left fairings, and cowl ring), making for "interesting" assembly. Looking at the pieces, though, you can see why they did this. First, because of the limitations of injection molding, they could get detail on the sides of cowl, instead of a detailed top and bottom of the cowl, with clean sides. Also, it's not mentioned in the instructions, but most of sprue E appears to be parts for different versions of the FW-190, including other side bulges on the cowl that you can use to build the tropical version. An added bonus you can use if you know how it was used on the Focke Wulf. Another extra piece: there are two sets of fan blades for the engine. One set has 12 blades, the other 14. You may have to do research on the a/c you're building to find out which one to use. When assembling the cowl, the front ring doesn't seem to fit well-it seems much to big for the rest of the cowl. It may be a little too big, but I found that the real cowling ring had a thick armor plate around it, so it was larger. Unfortunately, I found this out after I had faired it in... The cowl doesn't fit too well to the fuselage, but there aren't many places that need to be smoothed out-only on the bottom at the wing root, and just above the exhausts. Don't attach the cowl until after you attach the wings like the instructions say; assembly would probably be difficult if you did. The forward fuselage cover (E1) doesn't fit very well to the fuselage, but this piece shouldn't. On the real airplane, this was one of the worst fitting components, and should just be glued on "as is". So don't worry about that misaligned hatch, it's correct. Wings The wheel wells are their own piece, and are really well detailed. There is a total of 8 pieces in the assembly, not including the landing gear and braces. I like that they made the cannons separate pieces, instead of trying to mold them into the main wheelwell piece (B1). When you glue it into the wing, only glue the back of B1 as the instructions show, which I found interesting. This Before you glue it all into the wing, remember to open up the necessary holes in the bottom of the wing (A3). If you build the Fw-190G-2, open the two holes for the bomb rack; if you build the G-3, open the same two, and the two on the outer wings for the drop tank mounts. A maximum number of 4 holes could be opened in the bottom of the wing, but there is actually a total of 45 molded into the wing. Some of these can be used to mount the included underwing cannons, which are also on sprue E, and are also not shown in the instructions. The other 41 can only be guessed at. Future versions, maybe? The wings fit together well, even over the wheel wells. The trailing edges are incredibly thin, and at the flaps are molded into the upper wing halves, about 1/16" undercut. This is good if you want to drop the flaps, since the flaps on the real airplane were inset from the trailing edge. The detail on the wings is great, and the ailerons don't have valleys between the ribs. In fact, you can barely see the ribs unless you hold the wing up to the light, which is another thing I like about the kit. I left the canon barrels (M7) off until final assembly, and it would be a good idea to do the same with the navigation lights (J4). Final Assembly If you added the brace inside the fuselage, the wings should fit well to the wing root. The only place that needed some filling and sanding at wing and fuselage seams was on the bottom of the fuselage at the end of the long wing panel. All body work on the fuselage and wings was done with Zap-A-Gap and 320, 500, and 1500 grit sand paper, except this area, on which I used MEK putty. The horizontal stabilizers take a little work to get them to fit perfectly, but nothing major; the hardest thing is aligning them, and that isn't too difficult. The bomb rack has nice detail, but unfortunately doesn't fit together very well at all, nor does it fit well to the fuselage. Since I built the G-2, I don't know how well the drop tank pylons fit, but they seem to go together nicely. Painting and Decals
The airplane is overall RLM 76 "Lichtblau", with 74 "Graugrun" and 75 "Grauviolett" upper surfaces. The mottling was done with 75 by attempting to airbrush individual mottling patches, then lightly spraying it over those to diffuse the spots. This paint job doesn't have to be exact to any standards- some mottling was dark areas like my I first painted the light blue over the whole airframe. This wasn't the final coat of it, though. Next I painted the RLM 74 over the general area it covered on the wings and fuselage, then the 75 after that had dried. To get the fuzzy lines on the wings, I traced the wing onto a 3x5" card, drew in the pattern, then cut it out. I glued a few pieces of 1/4" balsa wood to the underside of the stencil, then held is against the wing and sprayed RLM 75 normally. I repainted the 76 down the fuselage, and retouched the 74 and 75 where I airbrushed too far up the sides. When this had dried, I applied the mottling described above, and again sprayed the light blue to fade the stark paint job (Figure 5).
Conclusion
Pieces: 111; 106 gray, 5 clear in 6-7 bags Versions: FW-190G2 or G-3 Decal options: 4 Instructions: 15 pages, illustrated, 9 photographs |