| Date of Review |
July 2007 |
| Manufacturer |
Fine Molds |
| Subject |
Star Wars Y-Wing Fighter |
| Scale |
1/72 |
| Kit Number |
SW7 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Fantastic detail |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Experienced |
| MSRP (Yen) |
¥3400 (About $31.00) |
Background
The Koensayr BTL-A4 Y-Wing Attack Starfighter is one of the
principal strike fighters operated by the Rebel Alliance against
the forces of the evil Empire. 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). In the Star Trek universe, the pilots
of these Y-Wing fighters would all be wearing red shirts as
few survived these battle sequences.
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 and even
though it is smaller than the Falcon, it is still as impressive.
The kit is molded in a light gray styrene and presented
on five parts trees. One additional parts tree molded in clear
is also included for the cockpit canopy.
As with the other members in this series, this kit is rendered
in 1/72 scale, which means that this single-seat fighter has
a small cockpit. Small or not, Fine Molds provides some nice
detail in there as well as an optional crew figure. These are
all assembled into the forward fuselage module and set aside.
The upper and lower halves of the main fuselage go together
and then most of the seam line from that join are covered with
detailed sections representing the fuselage sides.
The twin engine nacelles have forward domes like the early
USS Enterprise, but the exhaust nozzles are definitely Star
Wars. Suspended on four shafts aft of each nacelle is yet another
nozzle, just like the movie craft.
The forward fuselage module mounts to the front of the main
fuselage, and onto this structure you add additional plumbing
and details. The clear canopy encloses the cockpit, then a
canopy frame with forward gun turret mounts over the top of
the canopy.
This kit provides removable landing gear so you can opt to
rest the craft on its gear, then remove it and mount it atop
the included display stand for in-flight action.
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 for Gold Leader, Gold 2 and Gold 3,
and the decals even provide different wear patterns in the
markings for each of the three fighters.
Conclusions
This is an 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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