| Date of Review |
April 2006 |
| Manufacturer |
Academy/MRC |
| Subject |
CH-53E Super Sea Stallion |
| Scale |
1/48 |
| Kit Number |
12209 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Excellent detailing inside and out! |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$89.00 |
Background
The Sikorsky H-53 was designed as a heavy assault transport helicopter
that entered service with the US Navy as the CH-53A, the USAF as
the CH-53B/C, and the USMC as the CH-53D. The US Navy adopted their
Sea Stallion to serve as a mine sweeper, towing a hydrofoil sled
through the water to search for and clear mines left to disrupt
maritime traffic. This first version was the RH-53D.
Sikorsky must have taken note of actor Tim Allen's approach to
engineering - "more power" when it came time to improve
the H-53. They took their twin-engine workhorse and crammed a
third engine behind the rotor mast. To translate that additional
power to lift, Sikorsky altered the main rotor head from a six-bladed
arrangement to seven blades. Another innovation was the tilting
of the vertical stabilizer to port to optimize the tail rotor authority
against the increased torque from the higher-power engine/main
rotor combination.
This new machine became the CH-53E Super Sea Stallion and MH-53E
Sea Dragon. Entering service with the US Marine Corps in 1981,
it is capable of air refueling thanks to the refueling boom installed
below the pilot. The aircraft serves as the heavy-lift workhorse
to move troops and supplies between an amphibious task group offshore
and forces ashore. In Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring
Freedom, the CH-53E can move troops around the battlefield night
or day, can lift artillery between firing positions, and a variety
of other sling loads at will. While the V-22 Osprey will transform
air assault in the not-too-distant future, it won't be able to
fill the shoes of this workhorse. We'll be seeing the Super Sea
Stallion around for some time to come.
The Kit
It has been almost two years since Academy rolled out their first
'big helicopter' kit in 1/48 scale with the CH-46E Sea Knight.
That kit was impressive out of the box and built up into a beautiful
model (look here at
our build review). The kit featured separately molded interior
walls and captured the detail of the CH-46 nicely inside and out.
The only complaint I had was the presence of ejector pin marks
on visible portions of the interior of the cargo compartment.
Academy has definitely learned from the CH-46 releases and this
first installment in the H-53E family is absolutely gorgeous. The
preview photos that we've seen here and elsewhere do not do the
kit justice.
The kit is molded in light gray styrene and features finely
scribed details on the exterior. Supplied on seven trees, plus
a single tree of clear parts, the kit is beautifully
detailed inside and out. To facilitate molding detail into the
interior and exterior fuselage with no visible ejector pin marks,
the interior halves are molded separately from the exterior halves.
Unlike the CH-46, this kit has picture perfect interior cargo
compartment detailing with no ejector pin marks (see the photo
to the right).
Construction begins with the main rotor head, and this assembly
alone, including rotor blades and the various parts of the rotor
head consist of 40 parts! MAJOR kudos to Academy for providing
the option of building the rotor head either in flight configuration
or with the rotor blades folded. You don't have to take up an entire
shelf to park this beast.
Like the CH-46 kit, you'll spend a few minutes drilling out flashed-over
holes in the fuselage sides depending on whether you're building
the aircraft in flight-ready or rotors folded configuration. Either
way, there are lots of details on the aircraft exterior that will
be added later.
The interior of the cargo compartment is next with good painting
instructions and sling seats that are installed for the people-moving
mission. While the instructions don't reflect this, you simply
fold up the seats or omit them if you want to put cargo pallets
inside the aircraft.
The flight deck is next and the detailing is nicely done, though
the details on the instrument panel, overhead console, and center
console are a bit soft to work with the decals that overlay these
parts. Having 'hard' details would make it very difficult to overlay
these panels with decals, but if you are looking to paint your
own panels with parts containing 'hard' details, I imagine we'll
be seeing a detail set from Cobra Company that will fit the bill
nicely. With the flight deck completed, the fuselage comes together.
Some of the interior options you have include a positionable jump
seat on the flight deck, 50 caliber gun mounts for the port and
starboard sides, positionable crew entry door, and positionable
loading ramp and door. In addition to your choice of flight-ready
or folded main rotor, the tail boom can also be positioned flight
ready or folded. If you do fold the main rotor blades, all of the
extra holes you drilled into the fuselage early-on are for the
included blade holders on the rear fuselage.
Speaking of extra holes, many of the holes you will drill are
for the well-researched updates to the aircraft to provide infra-red
countermeasures, sensors and other interesting bumps and blade
antennas that accumulated as the aircraft was upgraded over time.
Markings
Markings are provided two decal sheets for three aircraft:
- CH-53E, 161541, CJ/08, HMH-461, OIF
- CH-53E, 162483, YK/07, HMH-466, MCAS Tustin CA, 1980s
- CH-53E, 161184, EN/04, HMH-464, MCAS New River NC, 1990s
In addition to the distinctive unit markings, the decals also
include walkways and an extensive set of maintenance stenciling.
Conclusion
This is the first time this aircraft has been rendered in 1/48
scale and all I can say is WOW! Do not confuse this CH-53E with
the earlier version of the CH-53 offered by Revell. The E-model
is distinctive by the seven-bladed main rotor, slanted tail, and
of course, the three engines. The earlier H-53 as depicted in the
Revell kit has six blades, straight tail, and two engines.
This kit is about as detailed as you can get and still be workable
using styrene alone. If you're a real hard-core AMS modeler, you'll
want to replace the molded-in grille details in the tail and elsewhere
with 'see-through' photo-etched screens. You'll also need the tail
rotor drive and joints to install inside the tail that are visible
through those screens. Here is a photo of how this looks:
Personally, I think I'll stick with building this beauty straight
out of the box. While the additional details would be interesting,
it is up to you if the benefit outweighs the work and potential
complications.
Before we leave this photograph, take a look at the second aircraft
from the camera in this US Navy photo. Those are tiger stripes
painted along the dorsal fairing of that aircraft. There is an
interesting variation on a plain gray scheme!
This is the best helicopter kit released by Academy and I'd dare
say the nicest scale model helicopter kit of any subject released
by anyone to date. Academy gets two thumbs up here!
My sincere thanks to MRC for
this review sample!
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