AMP - Accurate Model Parts
AIR => RAF => Topic started by: dougie47 on 12 Dec , 2010, 16:02
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Hello all,
Thanks to all our AMP members who have posted photos of their builds. These builds tend to include detailed research, attention to detail, scratchbuilding and the use of aftermarket sets. After all their hard work, modellers often protect their masterpieces inside display cases. What they don
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Dougie,
A fine story sir! An excellent restoration of a treasured family heirloom.
Well Done! ;D
T
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Dougie, wonderful story!! Its now looks a completely different model!!
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Great model, great family history!
We need a shot of her in the air
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Great story Dougie! The arrow from the He111 is really cool. The plane looks very nice and had held up quite well over the yearts.
Ernest
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Hello chaps,
Thanks for your comments. I only found out last week that the arrow was from a He111. This wasn't much of a surprise as there were always bits of planes in the garage and garden. One of the plant pots was a nosewheel from a Gloster Meteor (you don't buy that from your local garden centre!). And a circular bit of perspex was not the junk I'd assumed it to be but rather it was a port hole from a Sunderland. There were also small parts from a Hurricane, Scimitar, Whitley, Catalina, Typhoon, He111, Albermarle, Javelin, Viking, Viscount and a Trident.
If you like your aircraft, Ernest, you might like this -
(http://s212.photobucket.com/albums/cc118/dougie47/H8_B24.jpg)
It is a section from the fuselage of a B-24 Liberator that used to reside in the garage. The two white triangles are part of the five-pointed USAAF star insignia. This piece is now in a museum, as are the other bits.
Cheers,
Dougie
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Very, very cool Dougie!
Ernest
Hello chaps,
Thanks for your comments. I only found out last week that the arrow was from a He111. This wasn't much of a surprise as there were always bits of planes in the garage and garden. One of the plant pots was a nosewheel from a Gloster Meteor (you don't buy that from your local garden centre!). And a circular bit of perspex was not the junk I'd assumed it to be but rather it was a port hole from a Sunderland. There were also small parts from a Hurricane, Scimitar, Whitley, Catalina, Typhoon, He111, Albermarle, Javelin, Viking, Viscount and a Trident.
If you like your aircraft, Ernest, you might like this -
(http://s212.photobucket.com/albums/cc118/dougie47/H8_B24.jpg)
It is a section from the fuselage of a B-24 Liberator that used to reside in the garage. The two white triangles are part of the five-pointed USAAF star insignia. This piece is now in a museum, as are the other bits.
Cheers,
Dougie
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so are these from planes your dad shot down for keepsakes? Maybe your Dad was trying to build planes from spare parts...? ;D
That's a LOT of cool stuff, especially for a garage!
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Hi Wink,
As requested, here is a pic of the repainted Halibag in the air -
(http://s212.photobucket.com/albums/cc118/dougie47/halifrost.jpg)
It's been the worst December on record in the UK in terms of low temperatures and snow.
Cheers,
Dougie
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I can not believe it was cleaned to fly with that much ice on the wings ;D ;)