| Date of Review |
August 2005 |
| Manufacturer |
Sweet Aviation Model Division |
| Subject |
FM-2 Wildcat |
| Scale |
1/144 |
| Kit Number |
14103 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Simple build |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$16.00 |
HISTORY
The FM-2 was designed by Grumman and eventually was built
by General Motors after Grumman started production of the F6F.
It was Grumman’s first monoplane, after a long series
of biplane fighters for the navy in the F3F – series.
For the first year of WWII, it was the primary naval fighter
engaging the Japanese in the Pacific. Once tactics had been
worked out (don’t try to turn and dog-fight a Zero!),
it became a very useful fighter and “held the line” until
the improved F6F Hellcat and F4U Corsair became available in
sufficient numbers.
7,251 Wildcats were produced through May of 1945 with 4,777
being the FM-2 variant produced by General Motors. The Wildcat
had been the right aircraft at the right time. Wildcats, both
in British and US service, made a significant contribution
to the final Allied victory in the Second World War. In the
Atlantic, US Navy and British Wildcats helped keep the vital
shipping lanes open and free of prowling German U-boats. In
the Pacific, Wildcats were the mounts of a string of US Marine
Corps aces at Guadalcanal, men such as Major Joseph Foss, Major
Marion Carl, Major John Smith and Lt James Sweet, who are legends
in the Marine Corps history. A total of eight Wildcat pilots
earned the highest award the American people can bestow, the
Congressional Medal of Honor, a fitting tribute to the Wildcat
and the men who flew them. (Squadron/Signal F4F Wildcat in
Action)
THE KIT
Sweet #14103 FM-2 Wildcat in 1:144 th scale. There are 2
Wildcats in the kit. The kit is very finely molded, with no
trace of excess “flash”, and it has a very correct
outline and details. Once built, it looks like a Wildcat.
ASSEMBLY
I started the assembly with a quick painting of the interior
by brush. Not much can be seen once the canopy is in place,
so don’t spend much time in the cockpit. Throughout the
assembly sequence there are a number of Japanese language “tips” – not
being fluent even a little bit in Japanese, these pretty much
were passed over. BUT, the exploded view assembly instructions
are more than adequate.
The next step was to join the fuselage together and attach
the wings. The wing gas tanks were assembled and attached to
the wings.
In assembly step number 2, I painted the engine a “steel” color
with a much diluted flat black wash after the steel was dry.
The engine and cowling was then glued in place.
The only difficult step is number 3 where you assemble the
undercarriage support structure. Since I had left off the undercarriage “U” assembly
in step number 2 to paint the area (a chromate green for the
inside of the fuselage and a “steel” for the “U” of
the undercarriage), I left off this supporting structure until
I had airbrushed the entire rest of the aircraft.
In step number 4 I attached the tail planes, the canopy and
antenna but left off the propeller until painting was complete.
I then masked off the canopy with Bare Metal Foil™ and
stuffed damp facial tissue (Kleenex™) into the engine
area with a protruding toothpick for a painting handle and
the wheel well area.
Once main fuselage painting was complete and dry, I then attached
all the “bits” that had previously been left off
and moved on to the decaling.
PAINTING
I chickened out and choose the simplest scheme – VC-93
operating off the USS Petrof Bay (CVE-84). This scheme was
basically a solid blue (Testor’s Model Master Dark Sea
Blue FS 15042). I did not add any “lightning color”,
but upon reflection, maybe there should be as the blue is a
little bit TOO BLUE ! It is very glossy and pretty though.
The undercarriage, the undercarriage bracing, and the tires/wheels
were all brush painted as was the canopy after I removed the
masking. All flowed together with a topcoat of Future™ (product
of Johnson and Johnson here in the U.S.A. It is an acrylic
clear overcoat that can be easily brushed on with a wide brush
and is “self-leveling” – no brush marks when
dry). This sealed both the paint and the decals. Only the tires
and the supporting undercarriage remain “flat” colors.
DECALS
The decals were several shamrocks and national insignias
along with several individual aircraft numbers (20). All went
down on the glossy blue paint very well with no silvering.
CONCLUSIONS
This was a very enjoyable build. Since I usually “multi-task” when
it comes to building kits and have several that I’m actively
working on, I can’t tell you how long it took me. I would
say that except for the paint drying, this kit is easily a “week-ender” project.
Try one of these small kits. I sure you’ll be “hooked” on
them like I am!
ON-LINE REFERENCES
None. For other references, I used the aforementioned Squadron/Signal
in action, “F4F Wildcat” and the Detail and Scale
publication, ”F4F Wildcat”. Both are excellent
books for colors and details along with a moderate amount of
history, some of which I have quoted above.
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