Proof of concept !!!!

Click on the pic then enlarge. He did a great job




tko211 wrote:It still looks like the nose gear can be "plug and play" and allow for the gear doors to close so... I LOVE the option to display this one on it's gear or in flight! -YES? Am I seeing that right Pickel? Looking very sweet! Excited to have one of these.
My vote is for a non operational canopy swing canopy. My thoughts are to make small fake hinges on the side of the canopy so that those who want to display it wheels down can glue it open and those who will display it in flight can glue it down. (No big gash down the middle)pickelhaube wrote:I have been looking at the practicality of converting the 229 into a night fighter.
The Dragon model has totally reconfigured the cowling area. I am not sure why but maybe to get a different look. Probably also to accommodate the front wheel so it can rotate.
All that aside. The canopy . In order for it to work, it would have to slide almost all the way back to the tail in order to get booth crewmen out. If that would be done. An unsightly groove would have to be cut into the top of the body to accommodate the track.
Another option would be to make the rear crewman's area glass to swing open . Kind of like the Me-109. But this way it would be hard to pose the model with an open cockpit. Because the glass would slide back and the pilot's glass would cover up the radar's man area.
A third option is to have the glass swing open kind of like the Tomcat's canopy.
It would not open cleanly because of the front wind shield.The glass would have to slide back about 1/2 of an inch and then swing up. Or reconfigure the shape of the front wind shield.
So the easiest way would be to make the canopy removable in order to fit the figures . BUT NOT OPERATE.
So those are my few seconds of thought on the night fighter.
Or just put the radar antennas on the front and back and back and call it quits.
I thought of another option . Place the radar man's seat backwards. That way the cockpit would not have to slide as far back. He would be staring at a screen anyway to locate the enemy. I could just add another widow pane back there. But the track for the window slide may still have to be visible.
On the front wheel. I read in my book that there was a reason for the larger wheel. If I can remember right it was to get the angle better for take off. Rather than make the front strut longer they installed a larger wheel. Also she was tail heavy and the larger wheel added nose weight. I would imagine that the production aircraft would have used a smaller wheel.
If they used a smaller wheel it would make the wheel well a lot smaller . That way maybe you could accommodate a second crewman.
Opinions ?
I know what you mean ...pickelhaube wrote:It looks like the list is getting longer.![]()