| Date of Review |
August 2005 |
| Manufacturer |
Academy |
| Subject |
P-38J Lightning |
| Scale |
1/72 |
| Kit Number |
12405 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Very nicely tooled and detailed kit |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$22.00 |
Background
The P-38 Lightning started life as the Lockheed Model 22,
the inspiration of a young engineer by the name of Clarence "Kelly" Johnson,
who would later become Lockheed's chief engineer. The Army
issued a 1935 requirement for an interceptor aircraft that
could fly over 360 mph at 20,000 feet, fly at full throttle
for over an hour, carry twice the armament of current aircraft,
and still operate from relatively short runways. Johnson's
XP-38 had a top speed of 417 mph at 20,000 feet, a range of
almost 1,400 miles, and could climb to 20,000 feet in an impressive
(for that time) 4.5 minutes.
The P-38 would grow and improve through operational experience.
The Luftwaffe dubbed the aircraft "The Fork-Tailed Devil" due
to their encounters with the Lightning. The Lightning was so
fast that compressibility flaps had to be added to late-model
Lightnings to counter the adverse affects of approaching the
speed of sound during dives.
With its twin engines and long range, the P-38 was a natural
for the Pacific theater. The P-38J would become the high-altitude
workhorse of both theaters. Carrying a wide variety of air-to-ground
armament, the P-38J Lightning was a true 'swing fighter' able
to sweep the skies of enemy aircraft and tackle ground targets
as well.
The Kit
If you could have a completely new-tool P-38 Lightning in
1/72 scale, what features would you want? Academy has developed
a new P-38 for the 1/72 scale builder that is similar in design
and parts breakdown as their 1/48 scale Lightning. This means
that we'll be seeing a variety of 1/72 P-38 variants in our
future.
The kit is molded in light gray styrene and is presented on
four parts trees, plus a single tree of clear parts. Surface
detailing is scribed and nicely done, not too coarse.
Like any good aircraft kit, construction begins with the cockpit.
In this case, you assemble a complete cockpit tub that has
some nice detailing straight from the box. The completed tub
mounts to the top of the nosewheel well on the lower wing half.
Next come the main wheel wells. One of the big criticisms
of Lightning kits has been the lack of details/plumbing in
the main wheel wells. Not to worry in this case, this kit has
the plumbing and duct details present.
The main wheel wells are next installed into the boom halves
along with the radiator details. With the twin booms assembled,
the upper and lower wing halves come together, the booms are
installed with the horizontal stabilizer, and now the model
is starting to look like a P-38.
Now the nosegear and engine air intakes are installed along
with the landing gear doors. Almost there!
Now we get into some armament options. The kit comes with
bazooka rocket launchers, bombs, and external fuel tanks. If
you're sweeping the Luftwaffe from the sky, stick with the
external fuel tanks, but if the mission of the day is to plink
tanks, go for the rockets and bombs.
Another nice option that really isn't discussed in the instructions
are the propellers. You assemble the blades onto the prop hubs/spinners.
The one thing you won't see on a single-engine flightline is
a feathered propeller. When the single engine quits, the pilot
gets out and walks home. With multi-engine aircraft like the
P-38, when the occasional engine quits, the propeller is feathered
(the leading edges of the blades are turned parallel to the
airflow to eliminate drag). With these separate blades, you
can depict your model with one engine caged.
Yet another nice touch in this kit is the canopy. The P-38
canopy is actually rather complicated. It consists of a windscreen,
rear window, a rear-hinged overhead section, and two side windows
that slide up and down like car windows. The kit provides your
choice of an 'open' canopy with all six parts separate or
'closed' canopy with the windscreen, overhead section and rear
window as one part. The side windows are still separate.
The kit even includes the folding boarding ladder!
Not shown in these images is another interesting detail included
in the kit. A small piece of what appears to be bare metal
foil. On this sheet are a pair of pre-cut ovals that represent
the polished mirror surfaces on the inboard sides of the engine
nacelles, whether the aircraft is painted or bare metal. Why?
These 'mirrors' allowed the pilot to see if his landing gear
was down through the reflections on these mirrored surfaces
of the cowlings.
I'm a little surprised to see no indication of ballast requirements
in this kit, and given how other Lightnings have gone together,
this kit will need some weight in the nose to keep it from
sitting on its tail. The nose cap is one of the last items
to get installed, so there is time to get the model together
and then begin the challenge of weight and balance.
The issue of weight in the nose isn't a defect of the kit, this is
a common problem with virtually all P-38 models of all scales.
The real aircraft had two heavy Allison engines ahead of
the wing and lots of guns and ammunition in the nose, whereas
these kits have empty cowlings and gun bay, but lots of styrene
behind the wing to alter the aircraft's balance.
Markings are provided for two aircraft:
- P-38J-10-LO, 42-67916, 55 FS/20 FG, 'California Cutie'
- P-38J-20-LO, 44-23511, 392 FS/367 FG, 'Arkansas Traveler'
Conclusion
This is a nicely molded and detailed kit that provides you
with two attractive nose art options. One for the bare metal
'Alclad' modeler and a camouflaged example for the rest of
us. This should be a big hit with 1/72 scale modelers and we'll
definitely be seeing more versions of the Lightning in our
future. Definitely recommended!
My sincere thanks to MRC for
this review sample!
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