| Date of Review |
July 2007 |
| Manufacturer |
Hasegawa |
| Subject |
Kawasaki Ki-61-I Hien (Tony) |
| Scale |
1/32 |
| Kit Number |
08078/08078S (ST28) |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Easy build, nice details |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$58.95 (basic kit)/$65.95 for the special
edition |
Background
The Kawasaki Ki-61 was was a unique fighter in the Imperial
Japanese service as it was the only production fighter to be
powered the a liquid-cooled engine. The Ha-40 V12
liquid-cooled engine powered the Ki-61 and was a license-built
copy of the German's Daimler Benz DB 601A.
First flown in December
1941, the aircraft was popular with the test pilots as it posessed
good armament, self-sealing fuel tanks, and had good dive performance.
The main drawback at that time was the aircraft's high wingloading,
but test flights of the aircraft against the Ki-43, Ki-44,
Bf 109E and even a captured P-40E revealed that the Ki-61 was
the fastest of the group and could outmaneuver all but the
Ki-43.
The aircraft entered service in early 1943 and served through
the end of the war. The aircraft was an effective air defense
fighter against the lower-altitude B-29 strikes and would serve
in the air defense role as well as in the Kamikaze role (as
anything else flyable was pressed to do). When a US bombing
raid destroyed the only factory producing the Ha-40 engine
in early 1945, this left around 275 new-production Ki-61s without
engines. The solution was to adapt the aircraft to accept the
Ha-112 radial engine and these modified aircraft were redesignated
Ki-100.
The Kit
The Ki-61 Hien (Codenamed: TONY) was only available as a styrene
kit in 1/32 scale from one source - the classic Revell H276
release. This kit is still not bad by today's standards though
interior detailing is basic and it commands a high price on
the collector's market. The Revell Tony was one of three
1/32 scale Japanese World War II fighters in the series that
also included the J2M Jack and A6M5 Zero.
Enter Hasegawa - they have created a completely new-tool
rendition of the Ki-61-I Hei Hien with the same fidelity as
their recent (and beautiful) 1/32 P-47D Thunderbolt.
The kit consists of five trees of gray-molded styrene and
a single tree of clear parts. The detailing on the surface
of the wings and fuselage is finely scribed and just a hint
of rivet detail. If there was ever a mad riveter on the tooling
staff, he or she has been cast out. This tooling is clean and
nice!
The cockpit is nicely detailed though you will want to obtain
the eventual Eduard color photo-etch set containing a seatbelt
and harness for the pilot and perhaps some placards and instrument
faces to add to the visual fidelity of the cockpit.
Assembly of the cockpit and fuselage assemblies is very straightforward
as this kit is not over-engineered with details that you won't
see after assembly. One interesting innovation in this kit's
design is the separate ventral 'belly pan'. This mounts to
the underside of the completed fuselage (obviously) but before
installation, you add a wing box structure to the pan, providing
the fore and aft wing spars that the assembled wings will slide
onto. This provides a secure join for the wings to the fuselage
and it takes the posibility of misaligning the wing dihedral
out of the equation. Nice.
One other note on the wings - the flap structure is molded
to the inside of each flap, and the wing structure is molded
into the underside of each wing/flap well. The odd thing is
that there is no provision molded into the lower wing halves
to drop the flaps. Since the detail is there, you have the
option to position the flaps if you carefully remove the flap
section, but this option is not acknowledged by Hasegawa in
its instructions.
The kit provides nicely detailed landing gear, though I don't
know if it can be positioned up (the instructions only show
the gear installed down and locked).
Kit options include:
- Seated pilot figure
- External drop tanks
- Your choice of one-piece closed canopy or three-piece open
canopy
If you obtained the Special Edition release of this kit, you
also receive a white metal figure representing Captain Teruhiko
Kobayashi of the 244th Flight Regiment. You also receive the
add-on set containing brass and white metal guns. The latter
is available separately should you get the standard kit and
want the upgrade option.
Markings
Markings are provided for three aircraft:
- Ki-61-I Hei Hien, 244th Flight Regiment as flown by Captain
Teruhiko Kobayashi
- Ki-61-I Hei Hien, 6th Shinten Seikutai, 18th Flight Regiment,
as flown by Lt Mitsuo Koyake
- Ki-61-I Hei Hien, 39th Training Squadron, as flown by Sgt
Maj Iwao Tabata
Conclusion
These new-tool releases from Hasegawa in 1/32 have been magnificent
including the aforementioned P-47, Ju 87, Fw 190, and Bf 109.
When I saw this kit, I knew I just had to buy one. Now if only
Hasegawa will give us an equivalent new-tool J2M Raiden (Jack)
in this scale!
Definitely recommended!
I bought my kit from GreatModels
Webstore.
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