1/200 Hasegawa Boeing Jumbo Jets

by Eric Bade

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PRESENTATION

Commercial aviation is relatively seldom dealt with in our hobby. For instance my personal interest in jetliners is at least as high as my interest in jetfighters. But this doesn't quite show in my kit collection.

During the last few years there has been a huge renewal around commercial aircraft modeling with Minicraft and Revell releasing new kits and Skyline, Liveries Unlimited, Avigraphics, Flying Colors and Airways Graphics to name but a few providing us a bunch of beautiful decal sheets. This activity almost certainly fueled the interest in the field and I do see kits of jetliners around kit contests now.

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My favorite amongst jetliners is the B747 family. They have graced the skies since the early 70s but the sight of a B747 still is an amazing one. Until now I built 2 of them in the Hasegawa family : a B747-200 sporting the colours of Garuda Indonesia and a B747-300 belonging to Corsair (French) airlines. 

CONSTRUCTION

Construction of these kits is quite straightforward. I prefer decals than clear windows in that tiny scale. I therefore fill all windows. Fuselages halves are glued together. Windshields are glued in position then filled. The sanding process is quite long as fuselage parts are a good 35 cm long for the big Jumbos in this scale. It is one of the major stages in the construction. Wings and stabilators halves are glued together. 

Wing roots are reshaped to ensure a good fit to fuselage at the end of building. Even in this small scale landing gears are detailled with lights, rods, links. Wheels are painted and added to gears at this stage. Engines are built and painted. I use shades of metallic silver on fan blades and give depth with a wash of Tamiya Smoke. 

I observe documentation on real aircraft to add visible airframe details as fuselage air intakes or exhausts, opened panels, antennaes, lights. They will be added with paint, decals, scribing, plastic card according to appearance. 

One major issue is fuselage painting. Large white surfaces are a challenge. Airbrush or Airsprays are needed here. I tested different techniques and although results are fairly good I still have to find the definitive solution. 

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Wings and stabilators are painted a general light grey using the very good Xtracolor "Boeing Grey" paint. Silver is added on all flying surfaces leading edges. Then the coroguard painted panels are added using decals (paint is an option either with Xtracolor Coroguard or mixing different colors – mixing light greys and silver paint also will give you good results). 

Subassemblies are mated. I generally glue body landing gears first on B747s (ie nose and two inner main landing gears). Wings then are added. Wing landing gears are cemented (outer mains) taking care all wheels are on the ground which needs attention on these 5 landing gear/18 wheels kits. 

Decaling is another time consuming stage, especially when you use one of the newest superdetailed sheets coming with airline and technical markings. That's when you kit starts to look like a little jetliner. I used a Liveries Unltd decal sheet on the Garuda B747. The Corsair livery comes from a Flightpath with the addition of a specialized technical datas sheet. 

A few additionnal finishing details are added like wheel doors and beacon lights (I use Kristal clear and Tamiya transluscent colors – mainly red and Blue/green).

Eric

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Photos and text © by Eric Bade