| Date of Review |
February 2006 |
| Manufacturer |
Academy |
| Subject |
F-86E Sabre |
| Scale |
1/72 |
| Kit Number |
1681 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Sweet Sabre kit |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$16.00 |
Background
North American developed a derivative version of the USN's straight-wing
FJ-1 Fury concept for the Army Air Force. This initial version,
dubbed XP-86, was approved in May 1945. Due to the disappointing
results in the straight-winged design, and North American's access
to Messerschmitt design data after the end of the war, the straight-winged
Sabre and Fury were scrapped in favor of a swept design. This redesigned
prototype, the YP-86 first flew in October 1947.
The first production version, the F-86A, entered combat when the
4th Fighter Interceptor Group deployed to theater in November 1950.
The following day, one of the 4 FIG Sabres scored its first MiG-15
kill. As more aircraft and trained crews became available, the
Sabre was able to re-capture and maintain air superiority over
the Korean skies.
The F-86E Sabre was actually the second production
version of the Sabre following the F-86A. The F-86E incorporated
many improvements over its predecessor including the more powerful
J47-GE-13 engine rated at 5,200 lb of thrust, a 'flying tail' which
provided greater pitch authority, and two underwing pylons for
external fuel, bombs or rockets. The F-86E was produced in larger
numbers than any other version of the Korean War Sabre.
The Kit
If you haven't seen the Hobbycraft Sabres before, you'll be pleasantly
surprised at the level of detail in this scale. One of the first
things I looked for was to see if the leading edge slats were molded
in the 'up and locked' position as Academy and Hasegawa did in
their respective F-86 kits. This kit provides the slats as separate
parts to be positioned as you'd like.
The kit is molded in medium gray styrene that features nicely
scribed details and no flash. There are no ejector pin marks in
any of the 58 parts. The four clear parts that comprise the canopy,
gunsight glass and landing light are crystal clear.
The cockpit tub is molded as part of the upper intake trunk and
features some very good detail in this scale. Three-piece ejection
seat is a good representation of the Sabre's 'bang' seat and only
requires a seatbelt/harness (or a seated pilot) to complete the
setting. If you're not happy with the appearance of the intake
trunk and tail pipe, the kit also provides covers to help to pose
the aircraft parked.
Markings
Decals are provided for two different examples:
- F-86E-10-NA, 51-2800, 'El Diablo' of the 336 FIS/4 FIW as flown
by Major Charles Owens
- F-86E-10-NA, 51-2834, 'Jolley Roger' of the 335 FIS/4 FIW as
flown by Captain Clifford Jolley
Conclusion
Since the Hobbycraft F-86 is hard to find these days, this Academy
release is another opportunity to get your hands on some serious
scale air superiority.
This kit is recommended!
My sincere thanks to MRC for
this review sample!
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