| Date of Review |
April 2006 |
| Manufacturer |
Academy |
| Subject |
F-89J Scorpion |
| Scale |
1/72 |
| Kit Number |
12403 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Nice details, easy build |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$20.00 |
Background
The F-89 Scorpion was developed by Northrop as the follow-on to
the Northrop P-61 Black Widow. This aircraft would be the most
heavily armed fighter ever to go into production and never fire
a shot in anger.
Initially armed with guns and rockets, the F-89 would ultimately
be armed with the AIM-4 Falcon air-to-air missile and the Genie
rocket that carried a nuclear warhead. An F-89J had the distinction
of being the first to fire a live air-to-air nuclear weapon during
a test on July 19, 1957.
The F-89J entered operational service with the Air Defense Command
in November, 1956. The F-89J was not a new production item, but
rather the designation applied to 350 F-89Ds that were upgraded
with new avionics and weapons. The F-89J would remain the mainstay
of ADC until 1959, when the new generation of supersonic interceptors
came online. The F-89J remained in service with the Air National
Guard until 1968.
The Kit
This kit was initially released by Hobbycraft a number of
years ago and versions have been released by Academy since
then. Reviews that have been written for these previous issues
have all been favorable.
Comprised of 82 parts, the kit is molded in light gray styrene
and presented on four trees of parts, with the exception of the
two-piece canopy. All of the parts are flash-free, feature finely
scribed panel lines and details, and there are no ejector pin marks
on any surface of the kit that will be visible after assembly.
Assembly appears to be straightforward, as long as you remember
to install 7 grams of ballast in the nose. The kit features a nice
selection of armament, including a pair of nuclear-tipped Genie
rockets and four AIM-4 (GAR-2) Falcon guided missiles.
Detailing is nicely done in the cockpit and wheel wells, though
the super-detailer will still have some room to 'play.' The only
real criticism I have on the kit is the lack of depth in the main
wheel wells, but this is nothing major and the aircraft usually
had doors closed over the wells when parked on the ground (or in
flight for that matter).
The Kit
Markings are provided for two Air National Guard F-89Js:
- F-89J, 52-1949
of the 124th FIS, Iowa ANG
- F-89J, 53-2465 of the North Dakota ANG
The North Dakota machine carries the bright red outer wing panels
and tail used for operations over the frozen northlands.
Conclusion
This tooling has been released under a number of banners. Initially
from Hobbycraft, this kit has since appeared at least under the
Academy and Revell/Germany banners as well. In any case, it is
a nice rendition of the huge Northrop interceptor and is only second
to the Revell-Monogram 1/48 version of this kit.
Definitely recommended for the 1/72 scale modeler!
My sincere thanks to MRC for this review sample!
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