| Date of Review |
November 2004 |
| Manufacturer |
Revell |
| Subject |
F-106 Delta Dart |
| Scale |
1/48 |
| Kit Number |
5847 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Best F-106 in any scale |
| Cons |
Raised panel lines |
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$16.75 |
Background
The Convair F-106 Delta Dart entered service in 1959 as a
Mach 2+ interceptor to replace the limited Convair F-102 Delta
Dagger (Mach 1+) and other limited interceptors that remained
in service. Armed with four AIM-4 Falcon guided missiles,
the F-106 was a true product of the missile age, serving strictly
as an interceptor with no gun. One of the distinctive features
of the F-106 as well as its older brother, the F-102, was that
the four Falcon missiles were stored inside a ventral weapons
bay and swung out on trapezes when fired. As a last-ditch defense
against an onslaught of enemy bombers, the F-106 was also
armed with a nuclear-tipped Genie rocket.
On a few rare occasions, the F-106 was deployed overseas for
limited periods of time, but in its career, it never fired
a shot in anger. Due to similar performance characteristics,
the F-106 was sometimes used in dissimilar air combat training
to simulate the MiG-21. The F-106 proved a worthy air-to-air
opponent, but suffered some handicaps that were addressed on
selected aircraft.
The first handicap was visibility. The original metal frame over the top of the pilot was
a good idea for Mach 2 flight when better canopy technology hadn't been created, but that
frame obscured visibility in the dogfight. Many F-106s were retro-fitted with a 'blown'
canopy sans overhead frame. The second handicap was the lack of a gun. As was shown in
Vietnam, the Falcon missile wasn't very effective against maneuvering targets. A maneuvering
intruder into US airspace would be able to thwart being shot down by the F-106, so a smaller
number of aircraft had their Genie bays turned into ammo storage for a ventral-mounted
M61 Vulcan cannon. The combination of gun and canopy made the F-106 a worthy dogfighter. The
only downside was that the F-106 was designed for domestic air defense, so it was never
given self-sealing fuel tanks and was therefore not able to absorb any combat damage.
One noteworthy Delta Dart is on display at the Air Force museum after it had entered a
flat spin on a training flight, forcing the pilot to eject. The unmanned aircraft recovered
from the spin on its own and glided into a snow-covered field where it was retrieved, repaired,
and finished its service before entering the museum collection.
Unlike many of its predecessors, the F-106 saw continuous active duty service for 20+
years until replaced by the F-15 Eagle. The F-106 continued service in the Air National
Guard until finally retired in favor of the F-15 and F-16ADF.
The Kit
This re-release of the Revell 1/48 F-106 is welcome as it remains the best F-106 kit on
the market in any scale. While it shows its age in terms of raised panel lines, the
parts are flash-free and still show off some impressive engineering with the details in
the cockpit, wheel wells and in the weapons bay.
Molded in light gray styrene, the kit comes on four parts trees, plus a single tree
of clear parts. This kit probably has the best detailing of any of the early Revell-Monogram
kits and that detail rivals many of the state of the art kits available today.
You have several options to choose from when you assemble the kit. First, you can display
the aircraft with the weapons bay open or closed. You can choose from the blown or framed
canopy, and you can choose to pose that canopy open or closed. The landing gear is not positionable
but you could get the gear doors closed with a little work. The speed brakes are fixed open, but
these to can be closed with a little work. The flight controls are molded in place, but the
elevons are molded into a natural droop position making it look natural on the ground.
Markings are provided for two aircraft:
- F-106A-135-CO, 59-0142, 456 FIS, Castle AFB CA, 1962
- F-106A-130-CO, 59-0127, 48 FIS, Langley AFB, 1972
Conclusion
It is nice to see this kit back on the shelves, and the new decals are a nice
touch. At the MSRP of $16.75 USD, this is still one of the best buys on the
market. This kit is recommended to builders of skill levels.
My sincere thanks to Revell-Monogram
for this review sample!
Return to the Aircraft Menu
|