This Corsair was
used by El Salvador during the 1969 "Soccer War" that erupted with
Hondouras over the outcome of a soccer (or football in non-US countries)
match. The conflict lasted only about 100 hours, and there was no definate
"winner." The aircraft used were surplus American warbirds, purchased
after WW II.
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I built this kit
mostly out of the box, adding only Eduard photoetched belts, along with bombs
& shackles from a Hasegawa Mustang. The markings are from Hobby Craft's
"Coin" Corsair edition. The decals were old and of poor quality. They
shattered on removal from the backing sheet, and flaked when I ran a sharp #11
blade over the panel lines. Care and touchup with paint saved them.
For the camouflage colors, I used
Gunze acrylic SEA Light Gray and Dark Green, along with Model Master enamel RAF
Interior Green and Middlestone. These colors were sprayed freehand using a
Badger 150 airbrush. I used Model Master enamel Interior Green for the cockpit
and wheel wells. The landing gear legs and engine are various shades of Alcad
II. I added some minor paint chipping with an aluminum colored pencil, and dirt
and stains with pastels.
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I built this aircraft for a
customer as part of a more involved project. I will be building three more from
the "Soccer War," two Corsairs and a Mustang. It is an interesting
part of history, and familiar aircraft look very different in the schemes that
were used. A fully-loaded, camouflaged Corsair certainly looks unique!
Bill
Visit my website to see other
models of mine, I also build models on commission. http://www.pix.prettyneatinc.com/
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