F-302 Project Update

14 September 2007

The F-302 is nearing completion.

I have spent some additional effort dressing up my kit’s cockpit, mostly because it looks so bare straight out of the box.  It’s not overly accurate or detailed – but to be fair, at the time this kit was commissioned, there were not a lot of references available.  The pattern maker provided a couple of instrument panels and two seats; these look to have been sourced from plastic kits.  The layout of the panels is wrong, but a thick coat of paint (I used Intermediate Grey, but it’s not dark enough) and the provided screen decals can take care of that.  I did a half-assed job of adding the various lighted buttons you can see in the studio set using different colors of paint applied with a pin.  I would have been better off to slice up tiny chips of .010” styrene strip to give the panels and side walls some sorely-needed relief detail.

All the kit pieces needed judicious sanding and shaping to get them to fit without interfering with the resin canopy.  That’s pretty much par for the course with resin kits – or any limited run cottage industry kit, really.

I found a couple 1/72 scale helicopter pilots that I thought I could squeeze in, though they would need surgery.  Pretty extensive surgery, it turns out  - I probably should have used a couple Hasegawa Valkyrie pilots and reshaped their helmets.  As it was, I had to chop off most of their legs and sand down both their backsides and the seats in order to get everything to fit.

Fixing the  kit canopy was my next chore.  Out of the box it looks  … frosted ….  not because of bubbles or casting defects, but because the master was not polished. Both sides of the thing (in and out) were covered with a rough grey primer, and the resin faithfully picked that up. Plus a fingerprint! (might have even been mine)

I used 600, 800 and 2000 grit sandpaper to get it as smooth as possible. But doing so left very fine scratches in the resin, so it now looked “fogged”. If it were plastic I would have used Novus on it. I remembered an old tip about polishing out scratches with toothpaste - but you have to use the regular kind, not the gels. And all we have are gels in the house.

And then I remembered what my dentist uses on my teeth: baking soda.

I poured a small amount of baking soda on the canopy, then grabbed a toothbrush - I have one of those battery-powered ones that I use for scrubbing kits before I start building. It took a while, and maybe a tablespoon of baking soda in total, but the results were phenomenal. After the required dip in Future, the thing is crystal clear.

It fits in place well enough, after the usual test fitting, and sanding both the top of the pilot’s instrument panel and the sides of the canopy.  EXCEPT on the starboard side.  There’s a 1.5 mm gap towards the front, which tapers down to 0 as you go aft.  I thought the canopy piece itself was warped, but it’s not.  The Fuselage there is just cut down more than on the port side.  To fix this, I superglued a strip of styrene to the fuselage and carefully sanded it backuntil the canopy fits without a gap.  I lost some surface detail on the side of the fuselage in the process, but it was pretty soft to begin with.  I replaced it with panels cut to shape from sign vinyl (thanks Erin!)

Tonight I’ll mask the canopy and add the tail fins, so tomorrow I should be able to start the final painting.


Save US, Dave Petraeus

14 September 2007

Thank you very much, Jon Stewart, for getting that song stuck in my head.

Yeah, I know, his was “Iraq Me Dave Petraeus”. But listening to the radio this week makes my version sound more …. I dunno …  Appropriate.

Listening to the radio and the White House sponsored General Petraeus’ media concert, you’d think he’s either Captain America ™ or an imp sent from Satan to destroy the Chosen. You’d be wrong, either way … but that’s politics in America.

General Petraeus is one unlucky bastard. Rising star in the Army. Successfull tours in command right up to a division in an invasion. Turns out to be a thinker, not just a fighter, and succeeds in Occupation duties. In a pretty tricky environment (Mosul). Unfortunately for him, he’s the exception.   The Army keeps throwing him assignments that reek of  ” you’re so smart, do THIS”.   Remember that Newseek cover in 2005? That’s where his reputation as a miracle worker was cemented.

So the war is going south and in an effort to lipstick the pig, General Petraeus gets offered the “opportunity” to make the surge work. It’s not his plan. And let’s face it - the guy can’t be so stupid to believe that democracy can flourish in a land that has never had any experience with the system, where the last three generations of people have lived under the most brutal of dictators, and oh by they way, they’re being occupied by a foreign invader.   And it’s absolutely farcical to think that 700 years of internecine conflict and generations of scores to settle can be “reconciled” – or the process even started – after just 6 months.

So. Quick recap here:

-no history of democracy. It’s all authoritarian of one flavor or another. Since the beginning of time.-bloody sectarian divide 700 years old-three generations (at least) under a dictator with scores to settle.Gonna need a lot of lipstick for *that* pig.  And General Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker get to hold the lipstick. Through the whole circus, two people are conspicuously absent; both are his bosses.  General Petraeus doesn’t report to President Bush; he reports to CENTCOM, who is ADM Fallon (and noted skeptic of the utility of the Surge(tm)).  President Bush is ADM Fallon’s boss.  They give General Petraeus his marching orders, and yet General Petraeus is the guy who gets either praise or condemnation - depending on whether you are insane  or everyone else.  The Surge ™  is ALL the President’s doing - you can’t attribute this to anyone but  “The Decider”  did it.  Yet he and his marketeers have successfully pinned the whole thing on someone else: Petraeus.  And so the so-called liberal media - not just the crazies — go barking after Petraeus. Briliant is the diversion: once again, the president and his party get someone else to be accountable for their failings …. and it sticks.