| Date of Review |
October 2006 |
| Manufacturer |
Hasegawa |
| Subject |
Mitsubishi A6M5 Type 52 Zero |
| Scale |
1/48 |
| Kit Number |
51510 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Easy build, nice details |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$31.95 |
Background
By 1943, the A6M2 Type 21 model of the Zero was falling further
and further behind the American aircraft it faced in daily combat,
in both speed and firepower, as each more highly powered US fighter
was replaced by yet another. This led to the development of models
A6M3 Type 32, A6M3 Type 22 and finally the A6M5 Type 52.
The 12 meter wing-span of the 21 and 22 models was cut to 11 meters,
the cowling was redesigned and a thrust type engine exhaust pipe
was added to increase aircraft speed, resulting in a 25 kph increase
over the Type 22’s maximum speed of 585 kph. About 6,000
of the Type 52 were produced, this fighter bearing the brunt of
the war effort on the part of the Japanese Naval Fighter Arm until
the end of the war.
Tech Data:
- Crew: 1
- Wingspan: 11.00m
- Length: 9.12m
- Height: 3.51m
- Weight fully loaded: 2,733kg
- Engine: Nakajima Sakae type 21
- Maximum output: 1,100 hp/2,850m
- Armament: 2 x 20mm cannons, 2 x 7.7mm machine guns
- First flight of the type 52: August 1943
What’s in the box?
The kit comes in a tray and lid type box. The box art is not the
usual color painting we see on most kits. It is an actual photograph
of an A6M5 type 52 Zero parked on an Allied airfield in T.A.I.C.
USA captured markings (Technical Air Intelligence Center). This
center was located, during the war, in Anacostia, Maryland. A side
panel of the box shows another small photo of a Type 52 Zero that
is flying along in the captured markings of the ATAIU SEA (Allied
Technical Air Intelligence Unit, South East Asia), this was a British
outfit. You get markings for both of these aircraft shown in the
box.
The kit contains four sprues of medium gray parts., a tree of
clear canopy parts, the decal sheet and the instructions. All the
parts are in one large cello bag. I wish that the clear parts had
bee put into their own cello to prevent scratching. I had a spare
cello, lying around my workbench, so these went immediately into
it. As it was, I found several parts had already broken off the
parts trees and were floating around loose in the cello.
- The letter A parts tree holds: the left fuselage half, pilot
figure, drop tank, pilot seat , tail wheel, cockpit rear bulkhead
panel, propeller spinner and engine parts (14 parts).
- The letter B parts tree holds: cockpit floor and wall panels,
the propeller, foot pedals, dashboard and cowling parts (13 parts).
- The letter C parts tree holds: wing upper halves, main gear
doors and the main gear wheels (10 parts).
- The letter D parts tree holds: the single piece lower wings,
the horizontal tail pieces. exhaust stacks, main gear struts,
joy stick, DF loop etc. (11 parts).
- Finally, is the letter D tree of clear canopy & navigation
light lenses (6 parts). The canopy can be positioned open or
closed.
- The decal sheet, as mentioned, has one marking set for the
TAIC USA tail number 5 and one for the ATAIU SEA.
- The instructions complete the kit.
GreatModels lists the Hasegawa A6M5 in no less than 6 different
boxings, this kit included. So, that is why the instruction sheet
in this kit is the same as one of those kits. This is because the
markings on the last page of the instructions shows 4 marking choices
for a Zero in Japanese markings. A second sheet is included that
has the marking instructions on one side for the aircraft in captured
US markings and in British captured markings on the reverse side.
These are both 4-view drawings. Colors are called out in Gunze
Sangyo paints.
The instruction sheet consists of a single sheet that accordion
folds out into 8 pages. These pages start with a photo of the model
made up in Japanese markings, followed by the history of the aircraft
in six languages, including English.
Pages 2 thru 5 give a total of nine assembly steps, with a paint
color listing below these assembly drawings as well as some cautions.
Pages 6-7 give the four different Japanese unit markings that
are not used for this kit, nor do you get those decals.
Page 8 shows the parts tree drawings and decal application instructions.(again,
in six languages).
Conclusion
This is a nicely done kit. The detail is all engraved and finely
molded. I found no flash on any of the parts. Being as this kit
is intended to be marked as a captured one, you can put the Japanese
pilot in your spares box.
Highly recommended to modelers of Japanese aircraft. I won my
kit at a IPMS contest raffle last weekend.
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