| Date of Review |
February 2007 |
| Manufacturer |
Aoshima |
| Subject |
Thunderbird 1 |
| Scale |
1/144 |
| Kit Number |
3869 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
N/A |
| Pros |
Nice detail in this scale |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (Yen) |
¥2800 (about $23.50 USD) |
Background
Over 40 years ago, a man by the name of Gerry Anderson created
a number of television series depicting different possibilities
in our future. What was especially different about each of these
series was that none of the stars of these shows were human. They
were all puppets. Supermarionation was the term coined for the
concept.
When these episodes were more recently released on DVD,
I enjoyed watching them in sequential order for a change and seeing
a few episodes that I invariably missed along the way. While my
wife, who had never seen any of Gerry Anderson's work, was skeptical
about this series and especially the concept of puppets as actors,
it didn't take long for her to get engrossed in the stories and
forget that she was watching puppets.
I enjoyed watching these episodes on television when I was growing
up, and I especially enjoyed a series called the 'Thunderbirds'.
In this world, veteran American astronaut Jeff Tracy retires and
moved to a remote Pacific island with his sons and creates an organization
called 'International Rescue'. The chief scientist, called 'Brains'
developed a variety of technologies that would:
- Detect disasters and calls for help - this was the space
station Thunderbird 5 usually crewed by John Tracy
- Dispatch a first-responder to take command on-scene and
decide what special equipments were needed to affect the rescue.
The first responder was the hypersonic aircraft Thunderbird 1
flown by Scott Tracy
- Transport the required rescue equipment to the scene of
the disaster, the transport was Thunderbird 2 flown by Virgil
Tracy
- Affect underwater rescues using a special submarine - this
was Thunderbird 4 operated by Gordon Tracy
- Affect rescues within close proximity to Earth and to transfer
crew members between Tracy Island and the orbital Thunderbird
5 - this was Thunderbird 3 flown by Alan Tracy
In Anderson's world of the Thunderbirds, Jeff Tracy operated International
Rescue outside of the jurisdiction of any government, recognizing
then that some things in the future will not be different from the present.
The Kit
These kits have been around for a while, but the molds do not
appear to be worse for wear. This is Thunderbird 1, the hypersonic
first-responder that launches out of Tracy Island like a rocket,
then lands and departs the rescue scene like a Harrier.
The kit is molded in silver styrene and presented on three parts
trees. The kit features movable wings to allow you to display the
model in its vertical launch position or in flight. The lower wing
has a landing gear strut well that will also allow you to pose
Thunderbird 1 on its landing gear. Two lower tailplanes are provided
for this - one that looks like the other three for in-flight/vertical
display, the other that has an extended skid for sitting the aircraft
on its gear.
The model will take little time to build, but will take a little
longer to prepare if you're going to give it a representative paint
job. The hypersonic nose cone is red, while the mid-fuselage, parts
of the engine pod, and wingtips were light blue. The wings and
forward fuselage were silver whilst the remainder of the engine
pod was light gray.
The Decals
Decals are provided to replicate Thunderbird 1 as it was seen
in earlier episodes. At some point in the production, the vertical
Thunderbird 1 script was added to the underside of the aircraft
as well.
Conclusion
I am happy to see this kit still around and even to see an occasional
episode on TV. If you're a Thunderbirds fan, you'll want to add
this kit to your stash.
Definitely recommended!
My sincere thanks to HobbyLink Japan for this review sample!
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