| Date of Review |
March 2006 |
| Manufacturer |
Revell |
| Subject |
Ryan NYP "Spirit of St. Louis" |
| Scale |
1/48 |
| Kit Number |
5244 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
This is the best (and one of the only few)
kit of the Spirit of St. Louis ever made |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$12.75 |
Background
In May 1927, the names Charles Lindbergh and the "Spirit
of St. Louis" would forever be etched in aviation history.
Lindbergh wanted to achieve an aviation first - the first successful
non-stop aircraft crossing of the Atlantic. Bear in mind that man
had only lifted off for the first time in an aircraft only 18 years
earlier and even then could only fly a distance of what would be
the wingspan of a 747 airliner.
The Ryan NYP was a modified version of Ryan's M2 sportplane, a
high-wing, fabric-covered, single-engine monoplane. In order to
fly across the Atlantic, the aircraft would have to be converted
into a flying gas tank. Since the concept of "wet wings" was
still a few decades away, fuel could be carried inside a small
tank in the wing or in a larger tank in the fuselage. To fly roughly
3600 miles, the Spirit was going to need LOTS of fuel. The fuel
capacity was 2750 pounds, whereas the empty weight of the Spirit
was only 2150 pounds!
To get all of that fuel inside the aircraft, the tanks would have
to be at the center of gravity in order to avoid having the aircraft
become too nose heavy or too tail heavy as fuel burned off. This
meant that the area around what was the windscreen had to house
the fuel tanks. Forward visibility was almost nil - almost. A periscope
was provided to see forward when Lindbergh wanted, otherwise visibility
was only available out the side windows and through an overhead
skylight.
Remembering that up until Lindbergh's flight, six men had died
trying to achieve the same goal - New York to Paris non-stop. Charles
Lindbergh did this in a small, single-engine, fabric covered
aircraft . This is a remarkable achievement, but then again, a
mere 40 years after Lindbergh's flight over the Atlantic, men set
foot on the moon for the first time. It seems that aviation history
is moving so fast, anymore it is almost routine!
The Kit
Here is a newly tooled kit of that very famous aircraft from Revell
in 1/48 scale. The kit is molded in silver-gray styrene and presented
on eight small parts trees, plus a single tree of transparencies.
The design of this kit is a nice blend of simplicity and detail.
Nice work Revell!
This kit is definitely state of the art in tooling. While you
won't find finely scribed panel lines on the kit (nor will you
on the real aircraft), the fabric and underlying structure detailing
is very well done. What's more, the inside of the fuselage also
has structural detailing inside that will be visible after assembly.
Unlike most aircraft kits, assembly of this project starts with
the pilot. This kit features two figures - well two bodies anyway
and one head. One body is posed standing whilst the other is posed
seated in the cockpit. The sculpting is nice and a good result
can be achieved by most modelers.
The cockpit is simple, just like the real thing, but the structure
of the instrument panel frame, rudder pedals and control stick
linkages are nicely represented as is the rear face of the fuel
tank. A decal provides the instrument panel detail. The left fuselage
even has a throttle quadrant.
The cockpit subassembly goes inside the fuselage halves followed
by the addition of the horizontal stabilizer and its support structure.
The beefy landing gear is nicely rendered. This had to be very
strong in real life as well to keep the fully loaded aircraft from
becoming a dedicated belly-sitter (or worse, a ball of fire).
The J-5 engine is also nicely rendered and will look great with
the right combination of paint and oil washes. The spinner, prop,
and engine all mount to the nose which is in turn mounted to the
fuselage assembly.
The wing halves go together next and the completed wing is mounted
to the fuselage along with its own support structure. Assembly
is completed by adding the main cabin door.
Painting of this kit is simplicity itself. paint to the airframe
with a dull silver to simulate the silver dope applied to the fabric.
The unique polished effect on the nose is replicated with decals
to make your life easier. The nose, spinner, and prop are painted
a metallic silver.
Conclusion
I am amazed at how Revell can produce such a nicely detailed new-tool
1/48 aircraft model and still retail at under $13.00! I'm not complaining!
This kit is a bargain and is simple enough for younger modelers
while providing a nice painting and detailing opportunity for the
AMS modeler as well.
Definitely recommended!
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