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1/48 Hobby Boss Dassault Rafale C
No 75 Squadron Royal Australian Air Force
RAAF Base Tindal 2006
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This is my second what if for the
year. I like the lines of the Rafale, particularly the single seater. one of the
members at my club was selling Gekko Graphics What If decals for the Rafale, so
I figured I'd grab them and the new Hobby Boss Kit for a quick and easy build.
As usual AMS took over and I had to make some changes. |
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Kit Review Hobby Boss has coped a fit bit of flak because
some (Hornets, Rafale's and Mirage III's) of it's 48 scale kits appear
to close replicas of other companies products. I'm not going there but I will
comment on the quality, value for money and from what I can work out accuracy.
1. The kit is actually of the prototype
(or could be an M) which is different from the production
aircraft a few respects. These being the fitment of the chaff flare dispensers
(CDS), some panels (only the ardent Rafale fans would notice and there aren't
many of those :D ), the pipe (fuel vent/dump?) on the underside of the right
rear fuselage isn't fitted in the production C but appears on the M, and the gun cover and vent and
different. I chose to scratch build the CDS and modify the kit part for the gun
cover. I didn't bother with the gun vent or fuel pipe. These are only ones I
noticed, hence are probably the most obvious, I'm sure there are more. From what
I can gather the Revell kit has the same issues. Although it sounds like I bagging this kit many of these are pretty minor and
apply to plenty of other kits I've built. Now for the Good bits Finally, If you want to do a Rafale then the Hobby Boss kit is still a good option. |
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The Build |
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| The cockpit was reasonably basic, but modern jet cockpits can be bare with the large MFD's used these days. The pictures show what I did to make it look more convincing. I used stuff from the Eduard PE set for the ejection seat (See below) |
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The backs of the Apache cruise
missile's were a bit big and bare so I used a cotton bud to make them look more
like the real thing. The vents on the bottom of the drop tanks looked way to
shallow, plus they had a nasty seem running through them. I had some good images
of the underside of the 2000 gal tanks so another bit of scratch building. The
wing lights were cut out and replaced with a bit of clear plastic bent and
trimmed to shape. The Intake had plenty of ejection marks but as I ended using
intake blanks fixing this was unnecessary.
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| The Rafale has CDS launchers on the rear of the aircraft near the tail. The kit doesn't have these at all. Pretty sure the Revell kit is the same. Skyraider Models do a conversion set but I was to tight to purchase it (it would have ended up being more than the kit). I cut the sections out, used milli-put to shape the curves and plastic are to fill the other holes vest. My wife made the decals using MS Word. They were printed on my el-cheapo laser printer. |
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The paint scheme came from the Gekko Graphics What if Decal sheet. It had 2 suggestions, a 3
tone brown and a 2 green 1 brown (similar to SEA) scheme.
The browns in the Gekko scheme are not quite the ones I chose. I saw a picture
of a model A-10 in the experimental desert scheme on this site. I liked the
colours so decided to use similar ones on this kit.
After much deliberation I chose Tamiya Acrylics for the colours. I used XF 57
Buff,
XF 59 Desert yellow and XF 64 Red brown.
Using my Sparmax DH103 airbrush I painted the whole kit XF 57 buff first, then using a soft brown colour pencil I marked out the rough pattern for the red brown. I then painted the dark brown. Immediately after I want around the outline of the red brown with the desert yellow. A fair bit of touching up followed using all colours until I was happy with the pattern. A coat of Polly scale gloss then onto the wash. I've used Promodellers Weathering Sludge Wash on my last few kits and I love it. It's so forgiving as it is water based. Also you don't need to seal it before it applying decals. After the wash was cleaned off it was onto the decal. The few stencils on the kit decal sheet were predictably in French so I dug out the decal folder. I just put a few stencils from various spare sheets in some spots, e.g. the Danger triangles for the ejection seats. The Gekko Graphics decals were very fragile and had to be cut out individually, however they settled down reasonably well. After getting the sharks mouth nestled down I rushed in to show the wife. She cruelly pointed out I had it on the wrong way. There was no way it was coming off, thankfully after an email to Richard Chafer at Gekko Graphics I received a whole replacement sheet in the mail. Thanks Mate!!!!. After the decals everything was seal sealed with Gunze Flat and then some chalks were sued for some weathering. After a few touch ups the small details were added, this took about 2 weeks (why does this take so long) as I kept having to touch things up. I spent a few days trying to get the MICA missiles looking presentable, they are still not that flash. The kit comes with 2 2000 lt. tanks but I swapped my 2 1250 lt. tanks for a 2000 lt. tank. It was from the Revell kit and it's nose is different in profile. See the review above for more on the tanks The horrible empty intakes were solved with scratch built blanks made from tin foil and tissue paper trimmed to fit. The base is a spare floor tile, painted with a grey spray paint from the $2 shop. Overall I'm pretty happy with
the results, although their is one nasty problem, but I'll keep that to myself.
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Photography These where taken with a Panasonic FZ-30 camera, with aperture at F11, the shutter speed was manually set. Lighting was 4 white energy savers with a white card as background. Images were resized with paintshop pro XI with some minor brightness and sharpening adjustments. |
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The Pictures Click on the thumbnail for a better look |
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