| Date of Review |
November 2008 |
| Manufacturer |
Minicraft |
| Subject |
C-130A Hercules |
| Scale |
1/144 |
| Kit Number |
14581 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Beautiful kit |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$36.00 |
Background
The Lockheed C-130 arose out of a requirement for a more capable
airlifter after combat experience in Korea revealed serious
airlift shortcomings with the existing World War Two vintage
transports. In 1954, Lockheed first flew the YC-130 and in
the decades that followed, more than 2000 examples have been
built.
The C-130 is such a versatile airframe, it was adapted into
a variety of special missions from gunship (AC-130), drone
mothership (DC-130), electronic warfare (EC-130), airborne
command post (also EC-130), tanker (HC-130), ski-equipped arctic
airlifter (LC-130), special missions (MC-130), and hurricane
hunter (WC-130). In 2006, the aircraft marked its 50th anniversary
in military service and it is clear that it has another decade
or two of service (at least) left in her.
The C-130 is also the principal airlifter for 66 other countries
as well as equipping a number of commercial operators as the
L-100. The current production version of the venerable C-130
is the J-model featuring six-bladed propellers turned by Rolls
Royce engines. This is a bit of a departure since the primary
power for the C-130 prior to the J-model was the Allison T56A.
The Kit
Minicraft has produced the first styrene kits of the C-130
in 1/144 scale in a number of decades. Revell had the first
kit in this scale, but that kit is a collector's item and was
simplistic at best. Hasegawa produced the Herc in 1/200, Airfix
and Italeri in 1/72, and Italeri again in 1/48. So how much
detail is lost in this scale? Not much from what you can see
in these photos!
The kit is molded in white styrene and presented on seven
parts trees, plus a single tree of clear parts. The kit was
designed to be able to replicate quite a few of the Hercules
family, which is all-the-more reason to keep it in 1/144, as
a die-hard Herc nut wouldn't have room for many variants in
the larger scales.
Detailing is scribed and will look nice after painting. Fit
will be critical in this particular kit since this is a bare
metal scheme and we all know how bare metal finishes telegraph
any flaws. In experienced hands, this will look great in the
provided early airlifter scheme.
So what features are in here anyway?
- External tanks for the A-model or the later E/H models
- Pre-drilled holes under the wings for the tanks of your
choice, though you'll need to fill the holes you don't use
- Early A-model three-bladed propellers as well as the later
four-bladed propellers that were refitted to many A-models
as well as all subsequent Hercs (short of the J-model)
- Roman nose!
- Positionable ramp and door
- Nicely detailed landing gear
There is no interior in the cockpit, so you may want to scratch-build
the crew seats for the pilots and flight engineer, as that
will be about all you'll see through those tiny windows.
If you do leave the ramp and door open, you'll need to add
hydraulic actuators for the ramp, open the accessway through
the forward bulkhead (station 245), and add a few details in
the interior. A main cargo deck is provided.
Markings
Markings are provided for two examples. The first is the impressive
markings that use up most of that decal sheet - a C-130A w/radome
of the 463rd Troop Carrier Wing out of Ardmore AFB, OK in 1957.
The second is a camouflaged A-model with a Roman nose of the
Missouri ANG used in the late 1970s.
Conclusion
This is a very impressive kit in 1/144 scale and it looks
quite nice indeed. With all of the different color schemes
and special mission configurations, one could easily buy several
cases of these kits and still not run out of subjects. With
the nice detail in this box, you won't lack for some beautiful
models on your shelf!
Definitely recommended!
My sincere thanks to Minicraft for this review sample!
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