| Date of Review |
January 2008 |
| Manufacturer |
Fine Molds |
| Subject |
Star Wars X-Wing Fighter |
| Scale |
1/48 |
| Kit Number |
SW9 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Fantastic detail |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Experienced |
| MSRP (Yen) |
¥4700 (About $43.00) |
Background
The Incom Corporation T-65 X-Wing Space Superiority Fighter
is the fighter of choice for the rebel alliance and is an effective
match against the Empire's principal fighter, the TIE. In
the Star Wars universe, these craft were featured in several
edge-of-the-seat battle sequences through the first three movies
in the series (ironically identified as Episodes IV, V and
VI). If you were to ask a Star Wars fan to name a spacecraft
from any of the six episodes, the top two choices would be
the Millennium Falcon and Luke Skywalker's X-Wing fighter.
The Kit
Fine Molds has taken on several subjects out of the Star Wars
saga and the most impressive of the lot is the Millennium
Falcon! This release is clearly building on the experience
gained from the previous subjects from Fine Molds. In fact,
the first release in this Star Wars series from Fine Molds
was this very same X-Wing - in 1/72 scale.
With this kit, Fine Molds has given us the first 1/48th scale
installment and it makes one hopeful of other subjects getting
scaled up as well. This series to date has included:
The kit is molded in a light gray styrene and presented
on five parts trees (duplicate trees not shown). One additional
parts tree molded in clear is also included for the cockpit
canopy.
The kit features some interesting engineering as Fine Molds
went to a lot of trouble to ensure that you could fiddle with
the S-Foils (X-Wing movement) as much as you'd like without
worrying about the model falling apart. This kit uses a nice
blend of snap-tite-like construction as well as screws at key
places around the model to ensure a solid airframe.
The S-Foils go together with lots of details for each of the
four engines as will as for the outboard weapons booms. The
main fuselage goes together around a nicely detailed cockpit
and the S-Foil subassembly. The kit provides two head domes
for R2D2 so you can mount one behind the cockpit and the other
on a complete robot body to pose alongside your fighter. A
pilot figure is also included to sit in that nice cockpit so
your fighter will look natural in a flight pose.
The landing gear can be posed up or down. Either way, you
can mount the fighter onto a posable display base will adust
the pitch of the fighter into three attitidues.
The engineering in these kits improve with every release, and
like the impressive Bandai Star Trek snap-together kits, this release
is designed to be detailed without being overly intimidating. Nevertheless,
I recommend that this is not a kit for young modelers unless they
have some serious experience under their belts. While the kit would
be very impressive if built unpainted, the real benefit will be
from careful painting and attention to detail.
Markings are included to replicate the color's of Luke's X-Wing.
This kit provides two sets of markings, one set (shown here)
is standard waterslide decals while an identical set is provided
as stickers.
Conclusions
This is another impressive work of art in kit form. Congratulations
go to the engineers and designers at Fine Molds who can transform
a few partial sets and lots of CGI graphics into a three-dimensional
model.
This kit is definitely recommended!
You can see this kit at HobbyLink Japan here.
My sincere thanks to HobbyLink Japan for
this review sample!
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