| Date of Review |
January 2006 |
| Manufacturer |
Revell |
| Subject |
Sikorsky H-34G |
| Scale |
1/48 |
| Kit Number |
4467 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Four versions released - US H-34 Sea Horse, German H-34G, Tubine-Powered Wessex, S-58 'Sabena' |
| Cons |
Out of production |
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
OOP |
Background
The H-34 was one of Sikorsky's most popular helicopters ever produced
(next to the Blackhawk). The aircraft first flew in March 1954
and entered service with the US Army as the CH-34 Choctaw, the
US Navy as the H-34 Seabat, the US Marines as the H-34 Sea
Horse and even into the US Coast Guard.
The USAF acquired only
a few H-34s to serve as an interim rescue aircraft well after Sikorsky
production ended, and these were only retained a few years.
In addition to US military
service, the H-34 was exported to numerous military branches around
the world, and its civilian version, the S-58 saw global commercial
service as well. By the time production ceased in early 1970, over
1,800 examples had been built.
The aircraft was typically powered by a Wright R1820 radial engine
of 1,525 horsepower, and many were later re-engined with a turbine
pack rated at 1,550 shp.
The aircraft was employed in a wide range of missions from passenger
service, troop transport, medevac, supply, vertep, and more. The
aircraft was rugged, versatile and adaptable for duty in a wide
range of environmental and operational conditions.
The Kit
Revell/US and Revell released a series of kits representing
different versions of the S-58/H-34 family back in the late 1980s.
Through minor variations in plastic and decals, we had a typical
US H-34D, German H-34G, British Wessex 'Queens Flight', British
Wessex HAS.3, and a civil S-58 in Sabena airlines colors. All of
these were produced in 1/48 scale, and almost all are hard to come
by today. The easiest version to find is the Queens Flight turbine
Wessex as this one I recall was reissued again briefly in the 1990s.
So what's the big deal? This was one of the most widely used helicopters
in the world and remained in production for nearly 20 years. This
one airframe can be found in a WIDE array of international military
service colors as well as in civilian colors. If you wanted an
important piece of aviation history, this was kit.
This release of the H-34, representing the H-34G, is presented
on four parts trees. The two trees containing external airframe
parts and details are molded in olive green, a third tree containing
the aircraft interior is molded in light gray, while the fourth
tree contains the clear transparencies. Surface detailing of the
kit is a mix of scribed panel lines and raised rivets. This is
one aircraft where raised versus scribed detailing would make any
real difference.
Since the kit hasn't been on store shelves for quite a few years,
it has never benefited from the variety of aftermarket detail sets
that have been produced for more contemporary releases. In fact,
the only detail set I am aware of that is currently available is
Cobra Company's H-34T Turbine Pack Conversion Nose.
Out of the box, the kit is reasonably detailed and would make
into a nice looking H-34. The addition of the interior for the
passenger/cargo compartment is quite welcome.
For the AMS modeler, this kit is blank canvas awaiting some attention.
The cockpit is rather plain and a little work with a Waldron punch,
photo-etched seat belts, and other easy to acquire details will
set this area off nicely.
The cargo compartment is a nice addition, but it lacks a ceiling.
Observers will be looking up into the top of the fuselage. This
is easily remedied. The interior walls of the cargo compartment
have structural details molded inside the fuselage halves and this
is a nice start. Depending on the version you're modeling, you
can use Bare Metal Foil or lead foil with patterns scribed into
the surface to represent the sound insulation blankets installed
in many aircraft.
The big hole in this kit is under the cowl. Literally. Aside from
an insert that covers the exhaust stack hole in the left cowl half,
there is nothing in there. The AMS modeler will want to open up
the molded air vents in the top of the cowl halves and replace
this with some generic photo-etched screen. To take care of the
void inside the cowl, you'll have to fabricate a motor mount and
install an aftermarket R1820 radial engine. Whether you pose the
cowl halves open or closed, you can have that important bit of
detail visible through the various openings around the cowling.
Decals
Markings are included for three examples:
- H-34G, Heer (German Army), 80+58
- H-34G, German Navy Search & Rescue, 80+81
- H-34G, Royal Netherlands Navy, 142
Conclusion
This kit is long out of production, but I keep hoping to see Revell-Monogram
or Revell re-release at least the piston-powered H-34
kits again. Just imagine the possibilities if Eduard and Cobra
Company were to develop details and special mission variants for
this kit. In the meantime, if you have one (or more) of these kits
on the shelf, dust one off and check it out again. If not, perhaps
we'll see this kit back on store shelves again in the future.
Definitely recommended (if you can find one).
References
- Sikorsky H-34 - An Illustrated History, Lennart Lundh, © 1998,
Schiffer Publishing, ISBN 0-7643-0522-0
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