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Below are pictures of a scratch built 1/5th
scale Supermarine
Spitfire MK1 by an
English model builder. It's hard to imagine such infinite detail
can be accomplished even with super human devotion and dexterity.
The pictures and accompanying text are by the model maker, David
Glen. |
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If anyone asked me why I set out to build a Spitfire in one-fifth
scale, and detailed to the last rivet and fastener, I would probably
be hard-pushed for a practical or even sensible answer. Perhaps the
closest I can get is that since a small child I have been awe
inspired by R. J. Mitchell's elliptical winged masterpiece, and that
to build a small replica is the closest I will ever aspire to
possession.
The job took me well over eleven years, during which there were
times I very nearly came to giving the project up for lost. The
sheer amount of work involved, countless hours, proved almost too
much, were it not for a serendipitous encounter at my flying club in
Cambridge with Dr Michael
Fopp, Director General of the
Royal Air Force Museum in
England. |
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Seeing the near complete
fuselage, he urged me to go on and finish the model, promising that
he would put it on display. I was flabbergasted, for when I started
I had no inkling that my work would end up in a position of
honour in one of the world's
premier aviation museums.
As I write, the case for the model is being prepared, having been
specially commissioned by the museum with a case-maker in
Sweden. I have not yet seen it, but
from what I hear, it is enormous!
In one respect the story has gone full circle, since it was at
Hendon where I started my research in earnest,
sourcing Microfilm copies of
many original Supermarine
drawings, without which such a detailed build would not have been
possible.
The model is skinned with litho
plate over a balsa core and has been left in bare metal at the
suggestion of Michael Fopp,
so that the structure is seen to best advantage. The rivets are real
and many are pushed into drilled holes in the skin and underlying
balsa, but many more are actual mechanical fixings. I have no
accurate count, but I suspect that there are at least 19,000! |
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All interior detail is
built from a combination of
Supermarine drawings and workshop manuals, plus
countless photographs of my own, many of them taken
opportunistically when I was a volunteer at the
Duxford Aviation Society
based at Duxford
Airfield, home of the incomparable Imperial War Museum collection in
Cambridgeshire,
England. Spitfires, in various marks are, dare I say, a common
feature there! |
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The degree of detail is
probably obsessive: The needles of the dials in the cockpit actually
stand proud of the instrument faces, but you have to look hard to
see it!
Why the flat canopy? Well, the early
Mk.Is had them, and I had no
means to blow a bubble hood, so it was convenient. Similarly the
covers over the wheels were another early feature and they saved me
a challenging task of replicating the wheel castings. |
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The model has its mistakes,
but I'll leave the experts to spot them, as they most certainly
will, plus others I don't even know about. I don't pretend the
little Spitfire is perfect, but I do hope it has captured something
of the spirit and incomparable beauty of this magnificent fighter -
perhaps the closest to a union that art and technology have ever
come - a killing machine with lines that are almost sublime. |
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So, with the model now in
its magnificent new home, what comes next?
Well, I'm planning a book that will have a lot to say about its
genesis and perhaps just a little about me and those dear to me,
including a long suffering but understanding and supportive wife.
And then there's the Mustang... Yes, a 1/5th scale
P-51D is already taking shape
in my workshop. How long will it take? I've no idea, but what I am
sure of is that at my age (58) I can't expect to be building many of
them!
David Glen
Whaddon,
Cambridge
Dec. 06, 2006 |