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Early Warning is a dish best served Dutch: the Fokker F-270 Skyguard

Started by Paper Kosmonaut, December 17, 2017, 11:39:33 AM

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Paper Kosmonaut

Back-story
In the late 1960s, the Republic of the Netherlands (that's a loooong back story which is in short that after 1945 there isn't any royalty left in the Netherlands) wanted to increase and drastically modernise their ways of controlling their skies, coast lines and territorial waters.
Not just for keeping the country safe but also to relay necessary information to other planes and ships and for better coastal cooperation with the neighbouring countries. Therefor, in 1970 a single secondhand E-1 Tracer was bought from the US Navy to try out the system. Besides being a little aged, the Tracer also was by far not roomy enough for all the needs of the Dutch air forces (Navy included). So in early 1971 aircraft manufacturer Fokker was asked to come up with a plan for an airborne early warning system which also could perform other tasks like coastal patrols, sub hunting and even some meteorological tasks, if necessary.

In 1972 Fokker presented an unusual plan for a prototype. Somewhere underneath all the changes, there was an F-27 Friendship hiding. But the appearane was something radically different. The fuselage in front of the wings was lengthened about three meters. This same length was taken off from the fuselage section behind the wings, so it kind of looked like the wings were placed further back. The tail end of the fuselage was tilting more upward, like cargo planes.
All of this, the longer forward fuselage and the shortened rear, was done to compensate for the weight of a very unusual tail section. The horizontal tail was transformed into a twin tail. The middle vertical tail was completely new in design. It looked like it was placed on the plane backwards. It was unusually large and on top it had a rotating radar dish, about 8,5 meters in diameter.
Inside the plane, the electronics would be state of the art. Dutch company Hollandse Signaal, a daughter of the Philips electronics corporation, was designing new equipment that fit all the needs of the military. Through a rear entrance in the tail, instrument racks could easily be removed and replaced with other equipment.

Although the people involved already knew about the appearance of the plane, the Dutch press was highly surprised. In 1974, when they saw it for real the first time, some even said it couldn't possibly fly.  But it taxied to the runway and the new, powerful engines effortlessly made the plane take off.  Besides, the big dish had a lift factor that more or less cancelled out its own weight after takeoff, so it practically wasn't there in flight. Impressed by the performance, the military ordered Fokker to proceed and placed an order of four machines for the Dutch air defences.

Noted, the US. was in the final stages of development of their E-3 Sentry, based on the old Boeing 707. But since this still was awaiting results and would be considerably larger in size and price, the Dutch military was very keen on buying these smaller, yet hypermodern AWACS of Fokker. Also, the Dutch government saw a lot of export potential in this aircraft. Fokker spent the next year building and testing the planes. It was approached as a completely new airframe, because of the radically different structure. However, most of the flight characteristics of the trustworthy F-27 still were there and the test trials were completed much quicker than expected.

Since the F-270 Skyguard, as the plan was christened for abroad, was a lot cheaper than an average E-3 Sentry, and could offer significantly more room for equipment than the E-2 Hawkeye, the plane created a market for itself and got a lot of attention at the airshow of Le Bourget in 1975, where the Dutch air force demonstrated the second prototype of the F-270. It still had the agility of the regular F-27 and flew a couple of demos that deeply impressed the military brass that was there. Fokker got its order book filled quite well.

In the early autumn of 1977 the first batch of 3 planes, all sporting the same dark grey-blue livery, was delivered to the Dutch Navy and Air Force. Y-0001 and Y-0002, managed by the naval forces, were stationed at Den Helder and Valkenburg, the two naval airbases along the coast and Y-4709 was flying from Volkel AFB.

This was my first idea:


In the next post, the build report.
dei t dut mout t waiten!

Paper Kosmonaut

The model

Ever since I saw a photo of the magnificent looking An-71 Madcap, I had a weakness for this weird configuration of Dish-On-Tail AWACS. For this model I used an old 1/94 Revell Fokker F-27 kit I bought for just €1,50 in the thrift shop. It already was partially assembled and painted but I could take some parts apart again because the glue used was of the brittle yellowing kind.




This is the first model I was going to cut and saw in pieces. I was very curious on how I'd manage. For the tail section I used the tail of a paper model Madcap as a starting point.
The plane's scale, it is the silliest thing. It was mandated by the box. It had to fit in this standard box. So why not 1/94? Being a paper model builder, I was lucky enough to be able to print out parts of models in any scale I desire, so that Madcap tail was not that hard to obtain in 1/94.
(there is a great model of the Antonov in paper.)

dei t dut mout t waiten!

Paper Kosmonaut

With the fuselage temporarily closed with sticky tape, I started hacking away. This was the first time I did a thing like this and I was quite anxious to just mess it all up here.Using a little saw, this eventually was not as hard as I thought. Some sanding and readjusting later and the plane was in three pieces. Nose section, wing section and tail section. The wing section was further cut back to almost the rear ends of the wing root. Then it was sanded so that the tail part would end up pointing slightly upward and the top line over the plane would appear almost straight.







The wings were modernised with an early type of winglet. I don't really know whether it would have made any difference in real life but I thought it would look good. I knew Fokker was experimenting with winglets in the late 70s so I thought let's just go for it. The winglets originally were the stabilos of an 1/72 Bell X-1. The horizontal tail of the F-270 got vertical end tails added. Leftovers from a 1/48 Grumman F4F Skyrocket. I cut them off a bit to blend them in better and sanded away the visible ribbing.



I initially was hoping to find some modern 1/96 Hercules-y propellers online to make a modernised, upgraded version, but of course 1/96 already is a deviant scale size, let alone 1/94. So no success in that and I left it like it was.





The tail end and the wing section went together and of course needed a lot of putty-sandpaper-putty-sandpaper work to become smooth and seamless. The transition from wing to hull was extra tricky because of the short distance and slight change in curvature in the hull. I then made a new scratch-built extension to go between the front end and the wing section. Two bulkheads, small strips of plastic placed as staves of a barrel glued around the two. Then a layer of thin plastic sheet over the top to make the hull smooth again. It sure needed a lot of sanding, puttying and sanding after I glued it to the wing section. Lots of hours later it finally started to look like I wanted.





The cabin section was filled with white Milliput. Very old putty. Ancient, I might say. It was close to unusable. I put it in my microwave on defrost for a few seconds to make it kneadable again. (sparks!) But in the end it wouldn't harden any more. Oh well. It didn't matter anyway, I used it to put extra weight in the nose section (by adding a large nut I had laying around) and to seal it all off. The windows in the fuselage had to be covered with something I already had in mind but now really came in handy.




dei t dut mout t waiten!

Paper Kosmonaut

Now then, the tail. I hacked off the unnecessary bits and pieces. I placed a brass rod at the location I wanted the rotating axle to be. Secured it into place with thin plastic.
I took the Antonov tail, which I printed out on regular paper. After a quick fit, I redrew the outlines to fit the base of the tail section better. After a couple of fits, I had the desired shape and cut it out of plastic. I had some of the original 1/96 Revell Saturn V skins still in my spares box (I used stiffer and unprinted plastic for the Saturn) and this was flexible enough, it seemed. I also carved some panel lines in the tail to make it look more interesting.


(the upper part of the stabilo opening in the tail needed to be lower (that is what I meant with 'top lager' in Dutch.)





Fitting, readjusting, fitting, tinker tinker, and then I glued it to the tail section. The fit was almost perfect. The transition to the fuselage in front of the tail took some trial and error in paper before I cut the definitive shape out and glued it to the rest. Then of course, again, primer, putty, sanding to get rid of the seam between the tail and the fuselage. In the end I solved this by glueing a thin strip alongside the tail's bottom. it looked cool enough so I left it there as is.








the props also got new axles.


(Look! I made a helicopter! (-; )


test fit of wings etc.

The cabin part was carefully lined out and glued to the rest of the fuselage. Again the tiresome sanding process began. I lost the windows in the process, they were damaged by the sanding. I'll try to replace them with krystal klear windows later.





And then there was the quest for a dish. I tried to make it by using the tested paper model method of flat cone-shaped rings but it was a real pain in the butt to get it right. Then after some rummaging I found the plastic screen of an old wind-up alarm clock I already had disassembled for the sprockets. The glass was lens-shaped an had the perfect diameter. Yay! I used a more thorough type of glue to stick it to the plastic base circle and with a couple of thin strips of Evergreen styrene around the outside and some sanding it started to look the part.

It now is too dark to get good pictures, so I'll leave that up to tomorrow and thereafter.
Hope you like it so far!

Greetings,
PK
dei t dut mout t waiten!

Caveman

secretprojects forum migrant

Squizzette

"So many ideas, so little talent" ;)

PR19_Kit

Kit's Rule 1 ) Any aircraft can be improved by fitting longer wings, and/or a longer fuselage
Kit's Rule 2) The backstory can always be changed to suit the model

...and I'm not a closeted 'Take That' fan, I'm a REAL fan! :)

Regards
Kit

Gondor

My Ability to Imagine is only exceeded by my Imagined Abilities

Gondor's Modelling Rule Number Three: Everything will fit perfectly untill you apply glue...

I know it's in a book I have around here somewhere....

McColm

Great idea, on several occasions I have used the 1/72 Hasegawa Grumman E-2A Hawkeye rotodome fixed atop of the vertical tail fin of a C-130, C-160 , BAe Nimrod and Breguet Br.1150 Atlantic. Through trial and error I have come to the conclusion that a metal pin is needed, to slot into a drilled hole in the vertical tail fin to fix the rotodome in position as it will break off if moved.

sandiego89

Dave "Sandiego89"
Chesapeake, Virginia, USA

rickshaw

Interesting.  Looking forward to the rest.   F27 doesn't get enough model time IMHO.   :thumbsup:
How to reduce carbon emissions - Tip #1 - Walk to the Bar for drinks.

Hobbes

Interesting idea.
The fin does look a bit oversized (compared to e.g. the wing root).

Paper Kosmonaut

Quote from: PR19_Kit on December 17, 2017, 01:08:17 PM
That's looking REALLY good, and totally bizarre as well.

And that was eactly the road I wanted to take.

Quote from: Hobbes on December 18, 2017, 11:51:51 AM
Interesting idea.
The fin does look a bit oversized (compared to e.g. the wing root).

And that also is correct. But it adds to the grotesque look I wanted to achieve. It had to be almost ridiculous. Besides, with the rotodome (thanks for the right terminology, McColm!) on top, it already looks a little bit more in shape, yet still bizarre.

Thanks for all the kind words, folks! I like this kind of destroying of a perfectly good little kit a lot. This actually adds some creativity into plastic model building. Something I have always found lacking in just OOB building with even lots of after market detail sets. It just costs more than 10 times as much as paper modeling. Two new rattle cans, putty, the percentage of leftover paint I still had, the percentage of all the plastic doodads I added from other kits... But I still enjoy myself a lot!  ;D
dei t dut mout t waiten!

KiwiZac

Zac in NZ
#avgeek, modelbuilder, photographer, writer. Callsign: "HANDBAG"
https://linktr.ee/zacyates

Paper Kosmonaut

The rotodome is ready. I used, like I already wrote, the glass of an old alarm clock. I am not sure if it really glass, it was glueable, anyway.
I used some styrene strip for the rounding of the outer rim of the dome. Lots and lots of sanding, primer and sanding. I had to take all the old primer off and re-primer the dome when I finally sprayed the dark blue colour on it, because every scratch in the primer layer would have been visible.





Like McColm said, I had to use a long piece of brass rod for the dome (and I already incorporated a brass tube in the tail) but I discoveredeither the tail or the angle of the brass tube wasn't straight and when the dome rotated, it left a gap at the back of the tail. Not nice. I improvised a small tail extension. That did the trick.


I of course took care to line out the extra extension with the tail. But not yet on this picture.



A quick test with the dome on the tail and the wheels loosely inserted in their slots, showed the F-270 wasn't tail heavy. Great!





Now it's time for the last doodads and H-tail extensions. I am working on the decals and with this dark blue colour I am intending to use I think the black lettering won't be visible. Time to order a white letter decal sheet, I think...
dei t dut mout t waiten!