| Date of Review |
May 2007 |
| Manufacturer |
Revell |
| Subject |
F-101B Voodoo |
| Scale |
1/48 |
| Kit Number |
5853 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Best F-101 in any scale |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$16.95 |
Background
McDonnell Aircraft Corporation developed a new aircraft design
in response to the USAAF's need for a high-speed bomber escort
fighter. The resulting XF-88 had disappointing performance until
the twin engines were fitted with afterburners. While the results
were good, the program was cancelled. With the outbreak of the
Korean War a year later in 1951, a new bomber escort fighter was
requested and McDonnell submitted an enlarged XF-88. They won the
competition and the aircraft was redesignated F-101 Voodoo.
The F-101 was a twin-engined fighter powered by the Pratt & Whitney
J57 engine, the same powerplant that powered the Air Force's first
supersonic fighter - the F-100 Super Sabre, as well as the Navy's
first supersonic fighter, the F8U (F-8) Crusader. Unlike the Mach
1+ F-100, the F-101A fighter could reach Mach 2.25, with the F-101B
interceptor capable of Mach 2.4.
The single-seat F-101A fighter was designed as a nuclear strike
aircraft as a high-speed replacement for the F-84F Thunderstreak
in Europe. When the F-101A was withdrawn from service in 1966,
a number of them were converted into reconnaissance platforms -
the RF-101G.
The F-101B was supposed to be an interim interceptor solution
after it became apparent that Convair's F-102 Delta Dart was going
to face extensive production delays. McDonnell added the more powerful
J57-P-55 engines which resulted in the afterburner sections extending
aft of the airframe by nearly eight feet, but the added thrust
pushed the new interceptor to Mach 2.4. The nose was enlarged to
house a two-place cockpit, an improved fire control radar, and
a ground control intercept datalink. The aircraft was armed with
four AIM-4 Falcon missiles and up to two Genie nuclear rockets
in place of two of the Falcons.
As an Air Defense Command aircraft, the F-101B fortunately never
fired a shot in anger, but it did continue its service as
long as the aircraft that was supposed to replace it - the F-102.
The only nation to operate the F-101 outside the US was Canada.
The Kit
As I recall, Monogram first released this kit over 20 years ago.
The current Revell brand (formerly Revell-Monogram) fortunately
reissues this kit from time to time along with other members of
their Century Series - the F-100D, F-102A, F-104C, F-104G, F-105D,
F-105F, F-105G, and F-106A. Each of these kits are very detailed
for their day and will still hold up nicely today. With the exception
of the F-104s from Hasegawa, none of the other members of the Monogram
Century Series have been superseded by more modern/better kits.
This kit is molded in light gray styrene and presented on four
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.
I believe this is the first kit I remember building where the
instructions have you assemble the fuselage before inserting the
cockpit tub. This was also one of the first kits to come with intake
trunking and engine faces.
The cockpit tub has both front and rear cockpits molded together.
This kit comes with two nice ejection seats, a separate throttle
(another advanced kit feature), pilot's control stick, radar operator's
control stick, and two nice instrument panels. They even include
the rear cockpit windscreen, a detail many kit companies leave
out of many two-place jet aircraft kits.
Kit options include:
- Optional crew figures
- Positionable flaps
- Positionable canopy
- Positionable speed brakes
- Rotating weapons bay with:
- Two AIM-4 Falcons (GAR-1/GAR-2)
- Two Genie rockets (AIR-2/MB-1)
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-101B-105-MC, 58-0264, 15 FIS, Davis-Monthan AFB AZ
- F-101B-110-MC, 58-0306, 18 FIS, Grand Forks AFB ND, 'Red River
Queen'
Conclusion
This is still the only F-101B in 1/48th scale though it has been
released by Revell, Monogram, and Revell-Monogram with different
kit numbers and decal options. There is also an RF-101B produced
by Monogram in 1/48, but that is all that has been done to date.
Despite the kit's age, you're not compromising detail or fun with
this project.
Definitely recommended!
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