| Date of Review |
August 2004 |
| Manufacturer |
Kopro |
| Subject |
Su-25 Frogfoot |
| Scale |
1/48 |
| Kit Number |
3166 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Easy build |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
OOP |
This is the first Kopro kit I've ever seen in person and first
impressions really aren't all that bad. The kit comes in a large
and fairly flat box with a nice painting of a Su-25 on the attack.
The box was simply taped closed but it was surprisingly difficult
to get open! Inside are five sprues of grey plastic, one sprue
of clear parts, an instruction booklet, a huge decal sheet, and,
surprisingly, a set of vinyl Eduard Express Masks for the canopy
and wheels. Unfortunately all the plastic parts are in a single
bag, including the clear parts, and they had been scuffed by their
larger grey companions. Luckily the decal sheet has its own separate
bag. The box really is too big considering the small size of the
sprues and I'm sure they rattled around inside to the detriment
of the clear parts.
The instructions include a brief history of the aircraft in various
languages and have 23 nicely done assembly diagrams. All the parts
are identified by only their number, not their sprue letter. The
nicely done parts map will undoubtedly help in finding parts.
Color callouts are included also, as well as a paint chart with
the color codes from no less than six different paint manufacturers,
Testor, Humbrol, Revell, Gunze, Tamiya, and Agama. The instructions
are finished off with markings diagrams, a stencil diagram, and
a diagram for various weapons placement on the 10 underwing pylons.
This is probably the most exhaustively detailed instruction booklet
I've seen.
The decal sheet is highly impressive, although a bit off register.
It's only noticeable on some of the national markings where the
white outlines are somewhat thicker on the right side then on
the left. Markings are provided for six aircraft. These include
two Soviet aircraft in Afghanistan, one Czech Air Force, one Slovakian
Air Force machine in air show colors, one Iraqi machine, and finally
a single Ukrainian aircraft. Most of the aircraft have some sort
of decorative art, the most garish being the Slovakian machine
with large flames on it. The best thing of all is the large assortment
of stencils. Decals 34 through 132 are nothing but stencils, some
of which are duplicated up to 24 times. If you love to work with
little stencil decals then this is a good kit to indulge yourself
with. Alas I decided early on to use decals from Xtradecal for
the main markings but I do plan on utilizing the plethora of kit
stencils.
The molding of the kit is pretty nice, albeit it a little thick
and heavy at times. Panel lines are recessed and a bit soft. There's
some rivet detail here and there which is also recessed, however,
the real Su-25 is predominately covered in millions of tiny raised
rivets so this detail is a bit inaccurate. A determined (or crazy?)
modeler might wish to replace the recessed rivets with raised
ones but I think I'll pass on that. The landing gear legs have
pretty good detail, being made up of multiple parts and looking
quite complex. However, they are split into two halves with the
unavoidable seam which will have to be dealt with. The instrument
panel is strangely molded in clear plastic but with molded dial
details, no decals are provided for it. The seat is pretty bad
and would be best replaced with a resin item. I'll be replacing
the entire cockpit with a NeOmega item and Part PE. The landing
gear bays are completely devoid of any detail. Strangely, the
main gear doors are molded in one piece. It's up the modeler to
cut out part of the doors if building the aircraft with the gear
down. Finally, the wheels have decent hub detail but have no tread
detail at all. I might replace these with a set from Equipage.
Some of the sprue attachment points are pretty hefty, or run
onto the surfaces of the part, so extra care will be needed when
cutting the parts off the trees. Additionally, some parts have
some pretty heavy mold seams on them. However, there is very little
flash. There are a few ejector pin marks here and there as well,
including some giant ones on the inside of the air intakes. The
intakes themselves are molded in two halves and will undoubtedly
have a wicked seam on the inside. Alignment pins are few and far
between, most parts simply being a butt joint. I haven't tested
any of the major parts yet but I can guess it'll probably need
a fair amount of filler. As I said before, the canopy was a bit
scuffed. It's also a little thick and hazy but hopefully Future
will take care of some of this. Kopro was thoughtful enough to
mold some of the structural detail inside of the rear canopy which
is plainly visible when the canopy is open (unlike most jets,
the Su-25's canopy hinges to one side rather then sliding back).
Clear parts are also included for the nose sensor suite and some
of the navigation lights, as well as the before mentioned instrument
panel and HUD.
Luckily, as befitting a mud mover, the kit includes a pretty
good array of underwing stores. My Russian-weapons speak is pretty
poor so I cannot comment on their accuracy or even the exact names.
From what I can tell the kit comes with a pair of large fuel tanks,
a couple varieties of unguided bombs, two rocket launchers, a
pair of small air-to-air missiles, and two dual cannon gun pods.
The box art shows the plane with a pair of dual bomb pylons, sort
of like a TER but for only two instead of three bombs, but I don't
think these are included in the kit. The air show bird I'll be
building was unarmed but I'm pretty sure I'll put the ordinance
on it anyways; a ground attack plane just doesn't look right without
its weapons. There are a few sets of Russian weapons out there
(Cutting Edge and Kazan, for example) but their price and availability
meant I likely won't be using any of them.
Well, this kit definitely isn't in the league of Tamiya, Hasegawa,
or Revell. Just by looking at it I'd put it in a league somewhere
between the better MPM kits and Italeri. It remains to be seen
how well it'll build up. However, it IS a 1/48 Su-25 and I doubt
any of the above companies will ever offer one an up to date one
(Monogram issued a very early Su-25 prototype in the 1990s, but
it is inferior in most regards to the Kopro kit). I'm looking
forward to seeing how well this project will go.
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