| Date of Review |
January 2007 |
| Manufacturer |
Academy |
| Subject |
F-14A Bombcat |
| Scale |
1/48 |
| Kit Number |
12206 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Still one of the nicest F-14 kits in 1/48 scale and now represents late service
configuration |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$39.00 |
Background
The F-14A Tomcat entered service with the US Navy in the early
1970s and represented one of the most advanced fleet defense assets
ever developed. The aircraft's AN/AWG-9 radar provided one of the
first track-while-scan capabilities in the world and provided the
radar operator with a variety of unique detect, track, and engage
options to suit a variety of operational scenarios. It proved its
true capabilities when an F-14 Tomcat was able to engage and shoot
down six different targets simultaneously with the AIM-54 Phoenix
missile.
While the F-14A would serve long and proud, the US Navy would
not fire the AIM-54 in anger due to rules of engagement that would
come later that required visual identification of your target before
weapons release. By the time you could tally and ID your bogey,
you were too close for the Phoenix. The Tomcat was also armed with
the AIM-7 Sparrow and AIM-9 Sidewinder. The decision was later
made not to adapt the Tomcat with the AIM-120 AMRAAM.
With the advent of the multi-role Hornet entering service with
the US Navy, the concept of the swing fighter was contageous. The
Tomcat community knew they could carry weapons farther without
refueling and with the same precision as the Hornet, and eventually
they would get their chance as a variant of the LANTIRN pod would
be adapted to the aircraft providing the capability to identify
targets day or night, designating that target with the laser and
guiding a laser-guided bomb to impact. The Tomcat would become
the Bombcat.
The Kit
For a look at the original F-14A release from Academy, click here.
Academy did something unique in their first Tomcat release - they
molded the gun bay doors as a separate part. This was the early
styled door that had louvers for venting expended gun gas out of
the airframe.
The F-14B, which was essentially an F-14A with General Electric
F110 engines, featured a different gun bay door area that used
NACA scoops for gun bay ventilation. This design would also be
standard on the F-14D and retro-fitted to the remaining in-service
F-14As.

To accommodate the new doors, the underlying lower nose section
was also replaced in the kit. In fact, the parts you see to the
right are identical to the earlier F-14A release except one - Tree
H at the bottom of this image stack.
Overall, the kit is molded in light gray styrene and presented
on seven parts trees, plus an upper and lower fuselage, and a single
tree of clear parts. The molding on this release is as good as
ever.
The cockpit is nicely detailed and, like the Hasegawa kit, can
be displayed empty or with a pair of nice crew figures seated in
the 'pit'. Unlike the Hasegawa kit, the Academy F-14A can be posed
with the radome open revealing the radar underneath.
The wings of the Academy kit are designed like the Revell-Monogram
kit with a sweep mechanism that will allow the wings to be moved
after completion. If you want to display the aircraft in the take-off
or landing configuration with the flaps and slats all out, then
you really want the Hasegawa kit. If you are going to simply park
the aircraft with the wings swept, the Hasegawa kit is major overkill
and this kit is what you're looking for.
Tree H brings this kit more up to date. It has not only the new
lower nose and gun bay door section, it also adds the antenna bumps
on and under the wing gloves, provides the AN/AAQ-14 LANTIRN targeting
pod and pylon adapter, a pair of GBU-31(V)1 JDAMs, a pair of GBU-24
Paveway II LGBs, and even a pair of LAU-138 BOL/chaff launchers.
The Academy kit, like the Hasegawa, feature engine faces visible
down the intake trunks, though the afterburner chambers are a bit
shallow on the Academy kit. There are several replacement sets
for the TF30 nozzles and A/B chambers out there including a nice
set from Aires. The kit does provide a pair of open or closed nozzles
allowing you to pose your aircraft in a variety of conditions.
Unlike the Hasegawa kit, the Academy Tomcat comes with a nice
set of external stores including:
- 2 x AIM-9
- 4 x AIM-7
- 6 x AIM-54
- 1 x TARPS
- 2 x External Fuel Tanks
- 2 x GBU-24
- 2 x GBU-31
- 1 x LANTIRN Targeting Pod
Markings are included for two aircraft:
- F-14A, 161866, VF-154, NF/100, USS Kitty Hawk CAG aircraft
- F-14A, 161267, VF-154, NF/101, USS Kitty Hawk
Take a closer look at that decal sheet. Not only does Academy
provide all of the distinctive markings, but maintenance stenciling,
walkways, and something I haven't seen outside of TwoBobs Decals
- AIM-9, AIM-9, AIM-54, and GBU weapons stencils and live-round
color bands.
Conclusion
I am very pleased to see this kit released with all of the updates
you'll need for a later service line aircraft. Even if you don't
bomb up the Bombcat, the kit still has a nice assortment of air-to-air
weaponry. With the updated nose vents, you'll have an easier time
adding the GE engine nozzles to render a B or to use one of the
many conversions to render the D-model.
While some people still swear by the Hasegawa Tomcat, this kit
is by far my favorite quarter-scale F-14, especially with the updates
in the kit. I am definitely looking forward to building this one!
My sincere thanks to MRC for this review sample!
References
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