Kittyhawk
Established Member
This aeroplane is for a customer who only ever orders WW11 German aircraft from me, and the more obscure the better.
Since I'd never heard of it this necessitated a bit of research and as it turns out the Heinkel HE.115 was universally considered to be the finest multi-role float plane of any side during the conflict. Torpedo bomber, mine layer, photo reconnaissance, air-sea rescue, it excelled in them all and was used by both the Germans and also the Allies who got hold of a few courtesy of some Norwegian pilots who escaped and flew them to England.
When modelling aeroplanes on a small scale there are details that you can omit without detracting from the overall appearance, but the ladders are not among them. They are a definimg feature of the HE115 and as such had to be included.
I am a complete novice with soldering, my knowledge being limited to which end of the iron to hold. (Not the hot end) So the ladders posed a problem.
A post to the forum asking assistance produced many helpful replies ranging from where to source materials, how to set up the work, how to solder such fiddly little bits...the list goes on.. So I really do consider the model to be a joint effort between members. Thank you all.
Since I'd never heard of it this necessitated a bit of research and as it turns out the Heinkel HE.115 was universally considered to be the finest multi-role float plane of any side during the conflict. Torpedo bomber, mine layer, photo reconnaissance, air-sea rescue, it excelled in them all and was used by both the Germans and also the Allies who got hold of a few courtesy of some Norwegian pilots who escaped and flew them to England.
When modelling aeroplanes on a small scale there are details that you can omit without detracting from the overall appearance, but the ladders are not among them. They are a definimg feature of the HE115 and as such had to be included.
I am a complete novice with soldering, my knowledge being limited to which end of the iron to hold. (Not the hot end) So the ladders posed a problem.
A post to the forum asking assistance produced many helpful replies ranging from where to source materials, how to set up the work, how to solder such fiddly little bits...the list goes on.. So I really do consider the model to be a joint effort between members. Thank you all.