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Salvadoran Magister (IAI CM-170K Tzukit)

Started by Weaver, January 17, 2009, 02:57:27 PM

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kitnut617

If I'm not building models, I'm out riding my dirtbike

BlackOps

The paintjob looks great on the magister! Really diggin' this one  :thumbsup:  :wub:
Jeff G.
Stumbling through life.

Ian the Kiwi Herder

Cooler than a Polar Bear drinking an ice-tea in winter !

Ian
"When the Carpet Monster tells you it's full....
....it's time to tidy the workbench"

Confuscious (maybe)

Weaver

Thanks for the encouragement folks - finding it hard to drum up much time and/or enthusiasm at the moment, so it matters!  :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup:

JHM - still using propellant cans, and I suspect they wern't the problem. More likely temperature and a cr4p airbrush, since replaced.

Anyhow, some progress - shiznit duly weathered out of it, and minor bits of detail painted:











"Things need not have happened to be true. Tales and dreams are the shadow-truths that will endure when mere facts are dust and ashes, and forgot."
 - Sandman: A Midsummer Night's Dream, by Neil Gaiman

"I dunno, I'm making this up as I go."
 - Indiana Jones

sideshowbob9


John Howling Mouse

Styrene in my blood and an impressive void in my cranium.

Brian da Basher

That paintjob is absolutely astonishing! Top shelf all the way!
:thumbsup: :thumbsup:
The muted tones are excellent!
:wub:
Brian da Basher

Weaver

(note: yes this IS the same post as the Iskra one (but a little shorter) so please feel free to not read it again!  :thumbsup:)

Right, well after much faffing about and doing of other things, I now have a decal sheet printed up for this and the Iskra. This presented a dilemma: the roundels and flashes have white and yellow in them, which implies white decal paper, but they have to be very small to fit on the Magister wings and Iskra tailboom, and I wasn't convinced I could cut them out that well, plus there's also a lot of black writing which would have to go on clear backing.....

The solution (I hope) is to paint white circles/rectangles on the planes first and then put the decals across them. However, that still left the issue of how to make the masks. My circle cutter doesn't go small enough and my cheap'n'nasty punches arn't even vaguely sharp enough to cut masking tape cleanly. What I can up with was to put masking tape on a piece of very thin pasticard and then punch circles out of it, the card ensuring that the circles cut cleanly in the tape:




I did the rectangular/parrallelogram flashes by sticking a piece of masking tape to glass, sticking a piece of double-sided tape to the top of it, and then sticking dummy decals from a plain paper test shot on top of that. I then cut the shapes out with a sharp knife and a ruler.




Peeling off the double-sided tape and the cutouts showed that the masks could distort with handling, so I stuck fresh pieces of masking tape across them to hold them in shape, and then peeled the lot off and applies it to the models. With hindsight, I should have put paper release tabs under the edge of the "carrier" tape because taking it off, while leaving the mask in place was a major PITA. However, the results were reasonably good:



They now have a coat of thick white (from a 20yr old tin  :thumbsup:) drying. I'll see if they need another one tomorrow.



"Things need not have happened to be true. Tales and dreams are the shadow-truths that will endure when mere facts are dust and ashes, and forgot."
 - Sandman: A Midsummer Night's Dream, by Neil Gaiman

"I dunno, I'm making this up as I go."
 - Indiana Jones

BlackOps

I hope this works as planned, they are looking great! Really like the paint jobs a lot!  :thumbsup:
Jeff G.
Stumbling through life.

Weaver

#54
El Salvadors Whistling Death Planes

by Carlos Fiasco


from Central Region of Americas Plane Spotting newsletter #8




(IAI CM-170K Tzukit in circuit at B.A. de Mayaculpa)



The buying by Israeli of the Aerospatial "Super Magister" program in the beginning of 1970s meant, of, course, that many of older IAF Fouga Cm-170 Magisters were now excess to requirement and so were rebuilt and reupgraded by Isarel Aircraft Industries for the export purpose. Most of these were simplistic refurbishments of the standard 2-seat trainer variant and went on to serve in many world airforces as long-lived basic trainers, of which some are in place still. However, to make more sales of  Fouga Cm-170 Magisters to more customers, Isarel Aircraft Industries begat 1-seat attack verison with the name IAI CM-170K Tzukit.


(IAI CM-170K Tzukit in circuit at B.A. de Mayaculpa. Notable is one seat)


IAI CM-170K Tzukit was got from inspiration of Air Macchi Mb.326K (also named Impala in Southern Africa) and K-designation was in fact blatent copy of this name also. The designer's direction was to fit 2 DEFA 553 cannons (of which Israeli had a manufacturing permission) in bumps underneath, with many cannon shells in place of the rear pilots seat and bottom. But when this configuration was test-flown, kickback and shaking damaged the aircraft frame parts and even meant that that prototype was written away not to be flown again. Serendipitously, a solution was found. Isarel Aircraft Industries was at the time remaking Israeli Air Force Skyhawk aircrafts with DEFA cannons, so there old Colt Mk.12 20mm cannons were spare for fitting to Fouga Cm-170 Magisters and when this was tested in flight it worked OK.


(IAI CM-170K Tzukit in circuit at B.A. de Mayaculpa. Notable are 20mm cannons in bumps on bottom)


As well as the cannons, the wing beams were made stroger to carry more ordnance and the Turbo Mecca Marbore motors were tuned for more horsepower. An ejecting seat, some armour and sighting electrical boxes were added also. This was all called "Stage I". Stage II was conceived to start with new General Eclectic J-85 motors (same as Super Magister) to give the horsepower to carry more weights of ordnance, and a diffently arranged wing with 6 bomb racks made possible by the moving of the air brakes to  the back of new wing end fuel tanks which looked like those on Sukhoi Su-25 Frogsfeet.


(IAI CM-170K Tzukit in circuit at B.A. de Mayaculpa. Notable are two bomb racks only)


Unfortunately for Isarel Aircraft Industries, the IAI CM-170K Tzukit did not get sales to many customers. This was foremostly because even with the stroger wings, ordnance weight of the IAI CM-170K Tzukit was too little, even with clever Israeli-developed weapons such as "square" FFAR pod with 9 rocket projections, whilst, alternatively, the, Stage II version with heavier ordnance weight was too expensive to be buying for an already used aircraft. Arabian boycott of Israel exports was a large problem also. Only a few Stage I aircraft were sold and no Stage II aircraft were ever sold, but 1 customer was El Salvador.


(IAI CM-170K Tzukit in circuit at B.A. de Mayaculpa. Notable are 9 rocket FFAR pods)


American Government ideas was for many years defeat the export of hi-technology weapons such as jet fighter planes to Central American countries, but this policy was "blown up" by the Israeli in the 1970s when first they made a sale of Dassalt MD.450 Oragans to El Salvador then, a sale of Dassalt Supermystere B2s to Honduras. El Salvador followed this mode then by buying of 20 re-made Fouga Cm-170 Magisters of which the last 8 were conveerted to IAI CM-170K Tzukits before they were remade. Accusedly El Salvador wanted Stage II IAI CM-170K Tzukits but they were told by American Government that permissions to sell to them the American Gereral Eclectic J-85 motors would not ever be made, so they got Stage I only. El Salvadors IAI CM-170 Tzukits were sent in normal IAF dessert camoflage of green sand and brown paints due to a mistaken communication between the Fuerza Aerea Salvadorena and the Isarel Aircraft Industries. In El Salvador it was seen that these paints were too light of hue for the flora of that place, so it was decided to paint across the sand paint with a green paint of darker hue that was sent with the Dassalt MD.450 Oragans. A sotry is that the first painter saw a snake under the plane and was epiphanied to leave "snakes" of sand paint in the paint colours (or maybe he justly made a big mistake and it looked fine and they kept it, but the first story is better to tell in bars maybe?).


(IAI CM-170K Tzukit in circuit at B.A. de Mayaculpa. Notable is sand paint "snakes". Paint is badly after many years of fight)


The Salvadorean IAI CM-170K Tzukits and also there 2-seat Fouga Cm-170 Magisters fought a lot in the El Salvador Civil War in the 1980s years and soon 4 were crashed or shot down but they did many bombings of rebels. The palnes were said to have been given the name "Whistling Death" because of the sound of there motors (but truthfulness of this history is unclarified so far by researching). But from the middle of the 1980s Cessna A-37B Dragonflys were sent from America because of American President Ronald Reagans changes of American Government policy about El Salvador. The IAI CM-170K Tzukit was a lot posterior to the Cessna A-37B Dragonflys becasuse this plane (thrust with irony by General Eclectic J-85 motors that IAI CM-170K Tzukit was not allowed) had much bigger weight of ordnance, and so the IAI CM-170K Tzukit became less and less seen. Now only 1 is ordained to still be alaive in El Salvador with 2 Fouga Cm-170 Magisters also.




(All photos by author - pardons that closeup photos of aircraft on ground all taken by Military Police who arrested author at B.A. de Mayaculpa)
"Things need not have happened to be true. Tales and dreams are the shadow-truths that will endure when mere facts are dust and ashes, and forgot."
 - Sandman: A Midsummer Night's Dream, by Neil Gaiman

"I dunno, I'm making this up as I go."
 - Indiana Jones

John Howling Mouse

Fantastic, from the paintjob to the square rocket pods to the final photographs.  Great job!   :thumbsup:   :wub:
Styrene in my blood and an impressive void in my cranium.

Spey_Phantom

wow, it really turned out great  :wub:
awesome job, this shows that dispite the low placed wing the plane can still cary a formidable load
this whistling turtle sure shows that it has spikes on its shell  :thumbsup:
on the bench:

-all kinds of things.

Weaver

#57
Cheers Folks! Your kind comments are much appreciated, particularly since the way it came out was 50% luck!

Kit: Airfix 1/72nd Fouga Magister
Gun Blisters: Revellobox 1/72nd Mystere IV rocket pod halves
Gun barrels: Airfix 1/72nd early Skyhawk
Pylons: Airfix 1/72nd BAe Hawk
Paint: Humbrol enamels, sprayed (badly) and brushed, Karismacolour pencils and black pastel for weathering
Decals: home made national markings, magister stencilling, Hawk ejection seat triangles
Mods: headrest to make moulded-in seat look like ejector seat, masking tape seat straps, scratchbuilt gunsight, single cockpit and cut down canopy, gun blisters added, tailpipes blanked off, pylons added, rocket pods scratchbuilt from brass tube and Evergreen rod.

Best bits: the way the single seat conversion came together, the rocket pods and the gunsight.

Worst bits: when the filler cockled the engine door skin, and when the brown paint went horribly, horribly wrong.....

All comments welcome, as ever.....


























"Things need not have happened to be true. Tales and dreams are the shadow-truths that will endure when mere facts are dust and ashes, and forgot."
 - Sandman: A Midsummer Night's Dream, by Neil Gaiman

"I dunno, I'm making this up as I go."
 - Indiana Jones

Weaver

No pixels were abused in the process of making the "flying" photos: they were done the good old fashioned way....




.....which is why more than a few of them came out like this:



"Things need not have happened to be true. Tales and dreams are the shadow-truths that will endure when mere facts are dust and ashes, and forgot."
 - Sandman: A Midsummer Night's Dream, by Neil Gaiman

"I dunno, I'm making this up as I go."
 - Indiana Jones

BlackOps

50% luck my eye! Your builds are always cool, don't sell yourself short. This pair is no exception  :thumbsup:  :wub:
Jeff G.
Stumbling through life.