| Date of Review |
May 2006 |
| Manufacturer |
ICM |
| Subject |
Spitfire Mk.VII |
| Scale |
1/48 |
| Kit Number |
48062 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
The nicest Spitfire Mk.VII in this scale |
| Cons |
Small sink marks still in the wings |
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$23.00 |
Background
The history of the Supermarine Spitfire and its contribution to
the defense of Britain and the air war in general is well documented
in articles and reviews on the subject. The Spitfire Mk.V was initially
intended to be an interim design while waiting for the parts/resources
for the Mark III. The Mark V was essentially a Mark I/II airframe
with a Merlin 45 engine replacing the Merlin XX.
To intercept the high-flying intruders, the Spitfire Mk.VI was
developed with a pressurized cockpit, but the canopy had to be
bolted shut to help seal the interior. This replaced with the Spitfire
Mk.VII and incorporated a number of improvements including the
return of the sliding canopy and reduced span ailerons.
Since
the Mk.VII entered production after the Mk.IX, many
of the improvements put into the mid-production Mk.IXs were also
applied to this high-flyer as well. These included the updated
horizontal stabilizers and taller rudder.
The Kit
Here's a variant release from ICM that makes perfect sense but
I somehow missed the memo first time around. This is the Mark VII
Spitfire that was virtually identical to the Mk.VIII. This kit
shares the same parts trees as the Mk.VIII and Mk.IX releases also
reviewed on Cybermodeler.
The kit is molded in a white styrene (with a hint of purple) and
presented on six parts trees, plus a single tree of clear parts.
This kit is still my favorite Spitfire, and according
to comparisons I did several years ago, this kit scaled out spot-on
while the Tamiya and Hasegawa fuselages were a bit short.
What you get in the box is the Swiss Army Knife of Spitfires.
The parts trees contain everything you'll need to do just about
every variation of the Mk.VII, Mk.VIII and Mk.IX including:
- Early and late rudder
- Early and late horizontal stabs/elevators
- Detailed Merlin engine visible under a removable hood
- Removable gun access panels to reveal the gun bays
- Guns and access panels for the C and E wing versions, plus
even the large teardrop panels of the early Mk.VII
- Normal, clipped, and extended wingtips
- Parts for open or closed canopy
- Ventral auxiliary fuel tank
- Bomb or rocket underwing armament
- Removable top and bottom engine access panels
The kit cockpit is very nicely detailed and one of the best I've
seen in this scale which wasn't made from resin. The engine compartment
is also quite detailed, but I remember that all of that
detail won't fit inside the cowling and still have the upper and
lower access panels close. Not a problem if you're posing the aircraft
with the cowlings unbuttoned.
One of the molding 'bugs' that have been seen in the kit is still
there, small sink marks in the wing just ahead of the ailerons.
This is due to shrinkage at cooling due to a structural ridge molded
inside each upper wing part. This is no biggie as it took me a
little cyano years ago and now a quick treatment with Mr. Putty
now to remove these slight blemishes.
If you note the extended wingtips on the tree, they have a wraparound
to the trailing edge of the wing. This corresponds to the narrower
span ailerons used on the type and you have to snip the outer sections
of the ailerons to fit.
As I am reminded, I built one of these kits not long after seeing
it the first time at the hobby show. In that case, I opted to build
the Mk.VIII version which is released with additional parts in
another release. The fit of the model was really not bad, though
it needs a little more attention with dry-fitting than your Tamiyagawa-type
kits. I ran into a snag that I didn't even see until AFTER
I completed the model - the firewall and/or instrument panel
was a hair too wide and forced the fuselage sides to flare out
slightly wider. When the wings were installed, there was no gap
in the fuselage/wing joint, but there wasn't any dihedral left
in those wings either! When I do this one again, I just need to
dry fit the engine and cockpit assemblies into the fuselage and
make adjustments to ensure a tight fit at the wing/fuselage joint
without creating a flat Hurricane-type wing in the process. Live
and learn...
Markings
This release has markings for two examples:
- Spitfire Mk.VII, MD120, NX-O, 131 Sqn, Colerne, March 1944
- Spitfire Mk.VII, ON-W, 124 Sqn, Bradwell Bay, June 1944
Conclusions
This Spitfire Mk.VII is a nice kit straight out of the box. No
other kit offers as much detail, variant options, and scale accuracy
all in one box. It doesn't build as easily as a Tamiyagawa-type
kit, but they require aftermarket details to achieve some of the
same detailing. If you factor the low retail cost of this kit,
you have a clear winner.
Definitely recommended!
My sincere thanks to Testors and
the DLV Company for this review sample!
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