| Date of Review |
May 2007 |
| Manufacturer |
Hasegawa |
| Subject |
Mil Mi-24 Hind A |
| Scale |
1/72 |
| Kit Number |
04019/K19 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene/Photo-Etch |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Very nice detailing |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
OOP |
Background
Before the appearance of the now famous silhouette of the Mi-24
Hind D/E, there were a few transitional models that preceded them
and are almost forgotten. These were the true hybrid attack transports
that were very large versions of the UH-1C Huey Hog.
The Mi-24 series first started development
in the late 1960s following the success of the AH-1 Cobra in combat.
As the AH-1 was developed using the power train from the UH-1 Huey,
the Mil Design Bureau also saved development time by adapting key
airframe and powerplant components from the Mi-8 Hip/Mi-14 Haze
family. The Mi-24 was closer in development to the UH-1C Huey Hog,
as it not only carried an impressive array of firepower on its
stub wings, it also retained the ability to carry troops in its
cabin.
The first versions of the Mi-24, NATO Codenamed Hind A, featured
a greenhouse cockpit housing the pilots and gunner. This was essentially
an Mi-8 Hip with a larger cockpit to accommodate the gunner and
to provide greater visibility to the pilots. Variations of this
design would yield the Hind B and C models, but the same problem
plagued the pilot - poor visibility out one side of the aircraft
because of the copilot accommodations. This was later resolved
by deleting the copilot, narrowing the cockpit to a tandem two-place
similar to the AH-1 Cobra, and upgrading the armor protection around
both crewmembers - that design became the Hind D.
The Kit
I was cruising eBay recently and saw this blast out of the past
going for a very reasonable price. I remember when Hasegawa first
released this series as these were the best Mi-24s to ever become
kits by that point in time. Hasegawa first released the Hind A
and B models, and I was anxious to get the flying rhino - the Hind
D. By the time the Hind A and B kits made it to market, most of
these had already been withdrawn from service in favor of the Hind
D.
The kit is molded in tan styrene and rendered on five parts trees,
plus a single tree of clear parts, and a small fret of photo-etch
details. Hasegawa made several major achievements with this
first release of the Hind:
- They somehow got a look inside one of these birds to replicate
even this basic cockpit layout
- They were the first (I believe) to pre-mold the rotor droop
- the curl in the rotor blades at rest
- They were the first (I believe) to offer a fret of photo-etch
in a helicopter kit to render tail rotor details
What is really impressive about this kit is that despite the lack
of really detailed information, they did a credible job of replicating
the interior of the aircraft. The three-place cockpit is replicated
with a reasonable mixture of observation and conjecture. The control
consoles and instrument panels are provided as decals.
The main cabin is empty, but you could easily scratchbuild the
troop seats - the kit does include the troops as well as three
crew figures. The cabin is fully enclosed with forward and rear
bulkheaads, floor and ceiling.
Hasegawa did a nice job on the exterior as well. Lots of details
from pitot tubes to windshield wipers are rendered as separate
parts.
Armament includes four UB-32-57 rocket pods, four 9M17 (AT-2
Swatter) anti-tank missiles, and a single 12.7mm machine gun in
the nose.
The markings included in this kit are for a single example - Bort
24 from an unknown Soviet unit. Kudos again to Hasegawa on these
markings as I've seen some interesting spelling on the simple 'DANGER'
(OPASNO) markings placed at the end of the tail cone to warn of
the tail rotor.
Conclusion
I doubt we'll ever see this aircraft in a larger scale, but if
you'd like to have an example of the early Mi-24 in your helicopter
inventory, this kit is the way to go. The Hasegawa Mi-24s are still
the best Hinds in 1/72 to date.
Definitely recommended!
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