| Date of Review |
August 2007 |
| Manufacturer |
Trumpeter |
| Subject |
P-47D Razorback Thunderbolt |
| Scale |
1/32 |
| Kit Number |
2262 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene, Photo-Etch |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Superdetailed and superbly engineered |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Intermediate |
| MSRP (USD) |
$124.95 |
Background
The Republic P-47 first took shape as the Seversky P-35 before
that company became Republic. The design was evolved through
the P-43 Lancer before the requirements led to World War II's
heaviest fighter, the P-47.
The P-47 was designed
with the typical streamlined cockpit of the day before rearward
visibility in aerial combat became a requirement. Later P-47s
were redesigned with the rear upper deck cut down to facilitate
a bubble canopy atop the fuselage which provided excellent
all-round visibility. This new design was introduced part-way
through P-47D production, which for whatever reason didn't
warrant a new model designation.
P-47s were among the first fighters to accompany the USAAF
over to Europe as the United States entered the war. While
many fighter wings were quick to transition to the P-51 Mustang
as soon as it was available, the 56th Fighter Group was one
of the only organizations to refuse the Mustang and see the
war through in their beloved Thunderbolts.
The Kit
Trumpeter has not been resting on their laurels, they've come
back with another interesting series centered around the 1/32
P-47 Thunderbolt family. If you've seen the recent release
of the Hasegawa 1/32 P-47D, you'ld wonder what Trumpeter could
possibly do to top that. Let's take a look:
The kit is molded in the usual Trumpeter light gray styrene
and presented on fourteen trees, plus two trees molded in clear,
and a separate clear cowling. A small fret of photo-etched
parts is also included containing seatbelts, shoulder harnesses,
radiator grilles, and compressor blades. The main gear and
tailwheel tires are rubber, as are the 50 caliber ammo belts.
The detailing on the kit's surfaces is finely scribed and
include lots of rivet details. While this will be more visible
on bare metal schemes, they will be significantly subdued with
standard camouflage colors.
The cockpit is very nicely detailed and will only require
some careful painting to make the details stand out. Like most
Trumpeter releases, the instrument panel is enhanced with instrument
faces printed on clear acetate that will align behind the instrument
panel itself. The look is quite realistic.
While the cockpit is nice, the engine is a magnificent work
of art. There is good reason to provide the cowling in clear,
though you might want to leave the cowling off altogether.
This engine is easily one of the most detailed they've done
to date and would most definitely look great off the aircraft
and on an engine stand. The problem is that the engine doesn't
stop at the firewall. Trumpeter has recreated all of the ductwork
for the aircraft's supercharger system that sits in the rear
fuselage behind the side vents. The supercharger itself has
a photo-etched compressor, but there is just no way to see
any of that detail unless you leave one side of the kit fuselage
off.
The engine, firewall, ductwork, and supercharger make into
a huge assembly that also serves as the mounting point for
the cockpit tub before the whole thing goes inside the fuselage
halves. This assembly also has wing main spars, fore and aft,
which the assembled wings will slide over and provide a good
mechanical mounting as well as ensuring proper dihedral.
The flight control surfaces and landing flaps are all molded
separately and can be positioned to taste.
One of the most common mistakes made with P-47 kits is the
alignment of the leading edge machine gun holes. Some manufacturers
see the restored Thunderbolts out there and assume these are
accurate. One of the odd design quirks of the aircraft was
when Republic mounted the machine guns to be horizontal to
the ground rather than aligned with the centerline of the wing
leading edge. This would be the line that runs from the wing
root to the wing tip when viewed from the front. Check out
photos of the combat P-47s, not the restorations, and see how
the inboard machine gun hole sits above the wing leading edge
centerline whilst the outboard gun is below that same line.
The gun bays are nicely laid out with the ammo troughs and
gun mounts, with each of the eight machine guns provided as
well.. The gun doors atop the wing are molded separately so
they can be positioned open or closed.
As mentioned before, the cowling is clear, though the lower
duct walls that sit at the bottom of the cowling and the cowl
flaps are gray styrene. You do have your choice of open or
closed cowl flaps.
The kit provides FOUR different propellers, so you can select
the propeller used by the aircraft you're representing - check
your references.
External stores include:
- two bazooka rocket launchers
- two
500 pound bombs
- two 250 pound bombs
- two 150 gallon metal drop tanks
- two 75 gallon metal drop tanks
- two 108 gallon paper drop tanks
- two 108 gallon flat metal tanks
Markings
Markings are provided for two aircraft:
- P-47D, 42-27884, 120, 'Bonnie', southwest Pacific 1943,
as flown by William D. Dunham
- P-47D, 42-75242, LM-K, 62 FS/56 FG, as flown by Capt Michael
Quirk
The color profiles in the kit use Gunze Sangyo color numbers.
The decals also include a set of maintenance stencils.
But there are two sets of decals. One is the large sheet with
the markings and stencils, but this kit also includes
a specially protected sheet using a different color process
to render that lovely nose art for the 56 FG aircraft. Trumpeter
is stepping up their game even more!
Conclusion
So how does this kit stack up against the Hasegawa kit? Of
course this is a Razorback and the Hasegawa kit is the Bubbletop,
but Trumpeter is also doing a Bubbletop and you just know Hasegawa
will be back with a Razorback. The Hasegawa kit is half the
suggested retail price of the Trumpeter kit. Is the Trumpeter
kit worth twice as much as the Hasegawa kit? I think so. For
a simple build, I'd go with the Hasegawa kit, but if I am having
one of my usual AMS attacks, the Trumpeter kit is the AMS modeler's
dream. There is so much detail there, and still more possibilities
to add, that only you and God will know what is inside that
fuselage. That is until the IPMS Judges turn in their mirrors
and flashlights for fiberoptic borescopes to boldly judge where
noone has judged before...
Highly recommended!
My sincere thanks to Stevens
International for this review sample!
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