| Date of Review |
May 2007 |
| Manufacturer |
Hasegawa |
| Subject |
F-102A Delta Dagger |
| Scale |
1/48 |
| Kit Number |
HM160 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Best F-102A in any scale |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
OOP |
Background
The post-war aircraft industry was growing by leaps and bounds
as captured German technology allowed for advances in aerodynamics
and propulsion. In the case of Convair, they were the beneficiaries
of not only Dr Alexander Lippisch's research in delta-wing designs,
he became an employee of the company and helped them through the
growing pains of the XF-92. Thanks to his work, Convair became
the experts on delta-wing designs in the US with the F-102, F-106
and B-58.
In the early 1950s, the USAF put out a requirement for a supersonic
interceptor that featured integrated fire control and weapons.
Convair won that competition with the F-102. Despite their win,
the F-102 faced a number of problems including the loss of the
first prototype in crash. The aircraft was plagued with technical
problems including the need to change engines to the J57 (used
by the F-100, F-101, and F8U) since the intended J67 was cancelled;
a crash course in supersonic aerodynamics due to the poor performance
of the prototypes which led to the discovery of area rule; and
other challenges. The adoption of area rule required the complete
redesign of the fuselage which further delayed production.
While the F-102 was delayed in production, the USAF used the McDonnell
F-101 Voodoo as an interim interceptor. By the time the F-102 entered
service, it would serve side-by-side with the F-101 and would even
be replaced in Air National Guard units by the F-101 as the F-102B
(redesignated F-106A) entered operational service. The F-102B offered
the Mach 2+ performance that the A-model lacked.
As a footnote, the F-102As did not leave operational service fast
enough for some enterprising F-100 crew chiefs. The F-100 Super
Sabre was powered by the same J57 series engine, but its afterburner
nozzle was notoriously unreliable. The F-102's nozzle was better.
As the F-102s were retired, the afterburner nozzle assemblies were
grafted onto the rear of Air National Guard F-100s.
The Kit
Here is an interesting release from Hasegawa, the 1/48 F-102A
Delta Dagger. Does this kit look familiar? It should - it is the
Pro-Modeler F-102A with the Case X wing.
Take note that there are actually two versions of this kit on
the market. One is the early series F-102A with the flat wingtips
and rectangular elevons and the later series F-102A
with the Case XX wing (this kit). The Case XX curved the wingtips
down and changed the shape of the elevons.
This kit is molded in light gray styrene and presented on six
parts trees, plus a single tree of clear parts. As this is two-decades-old
tooling, the panel lines are raised, not scribed, but this should
not be a problem for most modelers.
Assembly of this kit starts with the afterburner chamber and nozzle.
This is installed into the right fuselage half, then the fuselage
halves are joined. Like the Monogram F-101, the cockpit tub is
assembled next and installed through the bottom of the fuselage
assembly.
While this kit doesn't technically replicate the intake ducts,
you do have an engine face at the appropriate location in the fuselage
with a bulkhead to block off daylight when peering down those intakes.
As with all the other members of the Monogram Century Series,
this kit has very nice detailing in the cockpit, weapons bay, wheel
wells, landing gear, etc.
Kit options include:
- Optional pilot and ground crew figures
- Boarding ladder
- Positionable canopy
- Positionable speed brakes
- Positionable weapons bay doors
- Extended or retracted trapeze missile launchers
- Four AIM-4 Falcons (GAR-1/GAR-2)
External stores include:
As with other members of the Monogram Century Series, this kit
is an easy build and is very detailed straight out of the box,
even by today's standards.
Markings
Markings are provided for two aircraft:
- F-102A-45-CO, 55-3387, 40 FIS, Yokota AB
- F-102A-95-CA, 57-0865, 196 FIS, Ontario ANGB, CA ANG
If I remember correctly, the Case XX wing was added to the F-102A
sometime during Block 75 production, which means the markings for
the 40th FIS bird need to go on the other Monogram F-102A kit.
Conclusion
This is still the only F-102A in 1/48th scale though it has been
released by Revell, Monogram, Pro Modeler, Hasegawa, and Revell-Monogram
with different kit numbers and decal options. Despite the kit's
age, you're not compromising detail or fun with this project.
Definitely recommended!
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