Republic P-47D
Gabreski's Last Thunderbolt
by Michael Dobrzlecki
|
Republic P-47D Thunderbolt |
P-47D-25RE, Bubbletop in 1/32nd
scale using Jerry Rutman's Resin Update & Fred Yarema's Gabreski decals
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Any modeler of a certain age with any familiarity with the
venerable Revell 1/32nd scale P-47D Bubbletop kit knows the amount of work it
takes to bring it up the standards of today's "shake 'n bake" Tamiya and
Hasegawa kits.
The cowl is the wrong shape, the tail and rudder woefully
undersized, the main gear is so tall that it is well on its way to Fiesler
Storch territory, the canopy is the wrong shape, the wheels are horrible, the
tail gear arm is on the wrong side, the waste gate fixed and variable doors are
thick lumpen shapes, the bleed doors, ramps and louvers on the rear fuselage
either have trailing edges the thickness of armored hatches, or are incomplete
or mere solid indentations, the prop doesn't resemble any windmill ever fitted
to this Republic fighter and the infamous Airfix riveter would feel right at
home with the mold finisher who dressed out this puppy.
I could go on, but you get the picture. You'd either have to be
in love with "doll-house" scale (as I refer to aircraft models over 1/48th), or
you'd have to have committed to building one for a museum project, which is the
reason for this model. After 20 years of coordinating exhibits for the Intrepid
Museum in Manhattan and various other musems and institutions, I've come to the
conclusion that "bigger is better" for museums. While most modelers limit
themselves to the type of model, i.e., aircraft , armor, etc., and, even to one
scale within their genre, I consider myself to be "Rennaissance Modeler", who
builds all types of model, in any scale, and in all medias. Growing up in 1950's
and 1960's, that's what "modelers" did and it seems to have stuck with me all
these years. One thing's for sure - I'll never get bored.
Building a Better
Thunderbolt |
With Revell's P-47, luckily Jerry Rutman, the grizzled resin
molder ensconced in the hinterlands of Pennsylvania, has come to the rescue with
a series of resin update products, including a full interior with a Fotocut
sheet for the instrument panel and other fittings, wheels - either covered or
non-covered - 6 or 8 spoked variety, a Hamilton Standard prop, a vac canopy, a
replacement wing section for correctly aligning the eight .50 cal. blast tubes
parallel with the ground, metal main and tail gear, replacement cowl and
ducting, replacement wheel wells, weapons pylons, flat belly tank, as well as
alternative Curtiss props, a fin fillet and some other items.
As the model was built under deadline for an permanent exhibit, entitled,
"Colonel Francis S.Gabreski - Polish American Ace of Aces", that I'm supervising
for the Polish Military Museum in America in New York City, I did not use all of
Jerry's parts for this first model. I did use the cowl, cowl ducting, metal
gear, resin wheels, vac canopy and Hamilton Standard prop. Because of a time
crunch, I did not use the wheel wells, resin retrack rails for the canopy, resin
interior, resin canvas boot for the tail wheel well or the replacement wing
sections with the corrected gun openings.
I did use the Fotocut instrument panel, though. I found
it quicker to redrill the correct location for the .50 cals, rather than fair in
the resin wing section. The bad seam in the wheel wells was corrected with a
combination and filling and sanding, as well as, judicious use of Evergreen
plastic strip.
Although I sanded off the rivets, I did not rescribe this particular model. I
also did not correct the waste gates or the fin and rudder shape. In lieu of
Jerry's resin canvas boot , I made one up out of Elmers Glue impregnated facial
tissue, which nicely obviated the need to correct the nasty seam in the tight
enclosed quarters of the tail wheel well. The nav lights on the wing tips were
simply painted on. I did use the oleo scissors from the Fotocut sheet, which
dresses up the gear nicely, and thin down the bleed doors, ramps and scoops. The
.50 cal. blast tubes and pitot tube are made from brass tubing. The antenna wire
is 2lb. fishing line attached to the mast which is offset to starboard from the
centerline of the fuselage. The mast was previously removed from the kit,
reshaped and installed just prior to painting with a piano wire pin installed
for strength.
Rutman's resin parts need some attention to pinholes and other casting issues.
The inside of the cowl needs extensive sanding to insert the kit engine. I
wrapped 180 grit sand 3m paper around a prescription bottle to perform the major
work, then finshed up with 400 7 600 grit. I cut off the mounting hub from the
kit's firewall and reduced its depth to the correct size to mount the engine on
Jerry's resin firewall.
Rutman provides a pre-marked .010 sheet already cutout for the
cowl flaps. Simply cut on the scribed lines. First, though, I imparted a curve
to the cowl flaps by wrapping it around successfuly smaller dowl shapes. It made
the fit on the cowl lip easier in the end.
I built the Hamilton Standard prop on a jig made from an
enlargement of the drawings in the Detail & Scale book on the Jug - simply glue
the drawing to a sheet of thick plastic and router out a hole for the hub, then
mount the blades with a twist and elevate the tips while the glue dries. The
blades have piano wire pins for strength.
Rutman's tail gear is too thin and delicate for the heavy 1/32nd
scale model and collapsed in about two days. Jerry was toying with the idea of
installing a brass pin while casting future parts, but given the offset yoke, it
won't do the trick. He needs to remake this part beefing up the cross-section,
even if it means sacrificing some scale fidelity. Likewise, the main gear may
still be too tall, but I have not gone back to measure it. I still think that
the canopy needs to be reshaped, also.
These comments are meant to be minor criticisms at most, and I
heartily recommend Rutman's resins to anyone looking to improve the appearance
of the 1/32nd scale kits he covers out there on the market. God knows, they need
it.
The colors and markings on Gabby's last P-47 are a matter of
some controversy. I spent about two years researching this aircraft, including
spending a day at Gabby's house in January 2001 going through his extensive
photo, film and document archives, which are prodigious, to say the least. I
first met Gabby back in 1981 at the IPMS USA Nats in the Big Apple and he was an
honored guest at sevral exhibit openings aboard the Intrepid, as well as, an
opening of an exhibit on the Polish Air Force at the Mighty Eighth Air Force
Heritage Museum in Savannah, GA. I also met and corresponded with Gabby's crew
chiefs, Ralph Safford and Felix Schacki, as well as the 8th Air Force Historian
, Roger Freeman, who, as a lad, spent a lot of time around the 56th F.G.'s
airfield at Boxted. Gabby's last Thunderbolt underwent a hell of a lot of
changes in a relatively short period of time between May 1944 and when he went
down on July 20. Most model companies, decal manufacturers and aviation
illustrators get his markings wrong, often mixing up details between schemes.
This model depicts Gabby's last P-47 on July 20, 1944, with his full air-to-air
score of 28 kills, when he pranged his prop when he got too low on a strafing
mission against a Luftwaffe airfield outside of Koblenz, Germany. After evading
for a couple of days, Gabby became a guest of the Luftwaffe for the next ten
months. The top surfaces are finished in RAF Ocean Grey and Dark Green with the
lower surfaces in Medium Sea Grey. There is better than even money that the
undersides were left natural metal, however. One clue is that the black ETO
bands were still present on the undersurfaces of the stabilizers. The other
possibility is that the fuselage may have been painted in Medium Sea Grey and
the undersides of the flying surfaces natural metal.
On the other hand, they may have simply masked the lower ETO
bands, when they painted the aircraft. Gabby and Schacki believed the undersides
were a lighter gray than used on the top surfaces. Freeman and others believe
that they were left natural metal. I used the last of Aeromaster enamels for the
RAF colors. By July 20 1944 the invasion stripes on the top surfaces were
removed and the areas repainted, with the paint job on the wings much nicer and
neater than that on the fuselage.
Model Master Red was used for the 56th F.G. cowl band and 61st F.S. rudder, both
areas having been undercoated first with white. The interior of the cokpit was
finished in Model Master European Green - a first rate match to the dark green
used by Republic Aircraft, according to Bert Kinzey. The wheel weels were
finshed in the new Italian Life Color Chromate Yellow. The Lifecolor paints do
not cover well, at all, but the end result was still nice ( good luck trying to
hand paint with this product without brush strokes). The excellent Alclad line
was used for most things natural metal, although I used some ancient Pactra
Steel for the gear, simply polishing the oleos on the metal gear for a great
natural look. The invasion stripes are done in Tamiya black and white and are
applied slightly outboard of the positions indicated in the Detail & Scale book
- again, pay attention to photos of the actual aircraft your modeling. One thing
that I did not replicate on the model is the yellow overspray above and below
the serial number. All masking was done with Tamiya masking tape. The top
surface camouflage scheme was free-handed with an Iwata HP-C airbrush - nice
machine, by the way, replicating the complex spray-job as best as I could from
the photos I gathered. The scheme on the starboard side of the fuselage and the
top of the wings is not well documented.
The model is finished with custom made decals done by Fred
Yarema on an Alps printer. I provided the research for the decals and believe
that these are the first truly accurate Gabreski markings available, right down
to the description of each kill, i.e., "ME-109", "FW-190" above each victory
flag, which, by the way, Schacki advised were actual decals bought in London
(Gabby mentioned how Schacki would nag him about being careful when he got in
and out of the cockpit to NOT damage his decals, "Schacki and those Damn decals
!", Gabby muttered to me, even after 57 years). Two oversized national insignia
grace the underside of both wings. The fuselage star & bar is precut to mount in
the opened and actuated intercooler ramp doors. The decals are translucent, so
back up the star & bars with white decal stock , but don't worry about the code
letters. When dry they look like they were painted on. Nice job, Fred.
The model won a 1st Place Award in the 1/32nd scale Prop
Category at the IPMS Region 2 Convention at Roanoke,VA, in the beginning of
October 2001, beating out about ten other entrants.
I have a second Gabby P-47D-25RE under construction with all the bells and
whistles on it, including all of Jerry Rutman's resin parts, the waste
gate fixed and variable doors and intercooler doors and ramps replaced with
sheet brass or this card stock, model is totally rescribed and the shell
ejection ports narrowed to correct size, as well as a wealth of work in the
interior and the nav lights replaced with clear fairings and bulbs drilled in
and colored, just to mention a few improvements. The fin and rudder have also
been enlarged to correct shape and a lot of detail added on the wings and
fuselage. This model will be circa D-Day with the so-called black tape/white
overspray full wrap around invasion stripe scheme, sporting just 27 kills. I
will finish the undersides of this second model in natural metal, just to hedge
my bets. It's about half way done, fully rescribed, with the wings ready to be
mounted to the fuselage. Ironically, I started this one before the one in the
pictures, but had to put it aside to finish the one for the museum.
Look for an article in the future in (probably) a British model mag covering my
research on the complete evolution of Gabby's colors and markings on his last
Thunderbolt. Jug fans will have to wait until then for full details. Patience
modeling fans, this is just a teaser.
Model, Images and
Article Copyright © 2002 by Michael
Dobrzelecki
Page Created 03 Januray 2002
Last updated 04 June 2007
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