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1/32
KAI F-4EJ Phantom |
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Introduction Aahhh!, Japanese Phantoms!….It sounds always exotic to me and since we have the big Phantom Kits in 1:32 scale in the market, I though it would be a very nice work to make one of them in the Japanese colors. In 1971 the first of the 140 F-4EJs (J for Japan) arrived in Japan directly from St. Louis. 125 of them were constructed in Japan by Mitsubishi (what an irony, if you think, that some decades before they build the famous Zero-Sen…). They were different as the US-F-4E version. They didn't had the bombing capability and no leading edge slats on the wing. Six units flown the F-4EJ and today two of them they fly now the F-15J/DJ. In 1984 the JASDF began with an improvement program called KAI and this would make their Phantoms (about 96 aircraft) flying many years more…that means, that the active time is grow now from 3000 to 5000 hours, a new radar (Westinghouse APG-66J), a new HUD (from Kaiser) and cockpit layouts, an IFF system from Hazeltine and many more electronic systems were installed. |
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How you can see the differences between a normal EJ and a KAI?
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| Converting
the F-4F into a KAI For the F-4EJ-KAI
I used once more the Revell F-4F. The F-4F kit offers very good seats but not so good instrument panels as the F-4E kit and has not the slatted stabilators. So I had to order them again together with the right fin of the F-4E Revell-USA" kit from the States because it is just very difficult to make them from scratch (once more, many thanks guys!). One more problem is the wrong radome of the F-4E/F kit, so I had to rework it to make it looking right. As I wrote before the kit has its problems and here is what you have to do:
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Painting and decals Today the KAI are painted in a one-color scheme (FS-36320) with smaller red disks and almost all stencils written in……Japanese!! That's a big problem, because I had no decals from an aftermarket sheet, so they have to be a self-made project. I was lucky enough to have the decals of the Hasegawa F-4EJ in 1:48 scale. I used the red disks and the serials numbers of it. The F-4Ejs have in the 70es and 80es big red disks and numbers that in the 90es would be getting much smaller for lower visibility reasons. That was what I want, because the big stencils in 1:48 scale have exactly the dimensions of the smaller markings in the 1:32 scale, if you build a KAI! But I had to make many of the warning stencils myself, e.g. the Sq. badge, the "ARRESTING HOOK" and "RESCUE" quadrants and the red chevrons. I had to find the proper Japanese font for typing those letters and that was …..very difficult! I chose the 506 Sq. badge because is a two color badge and easy to draw with my PC. I first paint a transparent decal sheet in yellow and then print the contour of the eagle head on it (with Corel Draw). The big "416" came from Verlinden Productions sheet of USAF-letters in 1:48… The weathering effects on the JASDF Phantoms are very high, so you can see the amount of dirt I put on my model… I used only enamels (Humbrol No. 128 and 126 for weathering) and no spray guns, everything is made by brush… I think such a conversion is something different and the Japanese Phantom is a real beauty beside the other … Hellenic F-4s of mine! |
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References
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| © Menelaos Skourtopoulos |
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