1/32 scale Mig 31 Firefox PP1

Howdy,
I was at the shop working on a couple projects and had brought the Firefox with me as well. I got quite a bit done on it waiting on the laser cutter files to run. I finalized everything on the nose, smoothed up the fuselage, and got the aviation hump behind the canopy all finalized. It’s a match to the filming mini now. It was a slow process but worked out well in the end. Now she’s all primered, ready to mold minus a little area in the rear where I need to fix a broken splitter on the inside of the engine shroud. Anyway, here a few pics of progress.
Will





Update!
masks are removed for the canopy, air brakes, and leading edges… she’s ready for first molds…ohh boy!
Best,
Will



holy crap that is great i wish i could aford something like that i just love the plane

Here’s all the parts so far for the masters, saving for RTV now.Enjoy da pics!
Best,
Will

A few days ago I found a paperback copy of “Firefox Down” in the local thrift shop & reread it the next day (and nite)! I had nearly forgotten how good of a writer Craig Thomas is!! [:)]

man will she’s looking beautiful, amazing progress so far, cant wait to see her fully built.

Howdy gang,
I got some more done. I found that for some reason my masks for all the recesses were too small, so I redid them. I also completed the bottom area as well…she’s ready for first mold now!
Best,
Will

[img]http://i153.photobucket.com/albums/s208/Wbnemo1/primer6.jpg[/img

Hi gang…I’ve not forgotten this project. Just had a major event in my life. My father passed away from a heart attack on the 2nd. I’ve been pretty depressed about it and it has taken a bit of a toll on my projects. I am however getting back into building as my dad always loved to see my latest creation. Hope to show many updates soon.
Sincerely,
Will
Ps actually I do have a few pics I can show.Mind the pics of me holding the master…to look this good after working at the shop for 36 hours straight lol… Ordering RTV for initial mold Monday

Prety job , mr babington, the best firefox at today,you have made pretty look details in cabin surface an jet nozzels, but i have noted same diferences with the movie 1/12 model.excuse me for say you and excuse my poor english but i beleive you understand me.

the most notorius is the airfoil thickness,thats mean a more thick wing, that is clear in the fuselage/wing intercection, the little deep of the fuselage in the aibrake section.the airfoil of the apogge model is more like a flat-convex airfoil, you have made a biconvex airfoil.

im not sure but i think the ventral cental intake must be less deep.

the air intakes looks enhanced o augmented.

i think this variations ,the wing thickness , the air intakes,points to make a flyable rc model, thas true? thanks.

Hi there, nice observation, Though everything I’m doing here is based on three things. the film the studio drawings, and my photos of the actual filming miniature, so it’s as per this, yes it is a tad thick to conventional aircraft airfoils, but the motion control model miniatures were originally intended to fly radio control, therefore having the air foil a little thicker than normal for rigidity. Ohh!,

make that four things!..I have a wing tip from one of the actual miniatures as well, also showing this slightly thicker cross section on the airfoil.

Hope this helps,

Will

Ps. were’d ya get these pics of the 63" motion control model, you’ve seen???

Hi Will,hi to the other forum members ,firefox fans ,aviation modelers.gretings from Lima Peru.

Well, Apogee make the full scale and the miniatures 1/12 , 1/36 and 1/96 first, the rc models was modifications of the 1/12 models made by Jay Replogle and Larry Wolf for make a flyable model able to take off ,as in the movie appears,except in the ice floe…" area and cord of the wings were increased the position and size of the air intakes, the placement of the landing gear,etc."…The final “coup the grace” for this miniatures was to slide down a wire filled with explosives to satisfy the final destruction of Voskovs plane…(american cinematographer september 1982 page 924 “Models for firefox” by Grant Mc Cune).

The wingtip rest you have own must be part of this exploding model , the modificated model.

i dont see that studio drawings or in what development stadium are this , may be this drawings have been the drawings appear in the movie trailer?front and back view?and , may be , the Baranovich plan show Gant in her dacha?if this the case that plans shows differences with the final firefox ,per example.,wing trailing edge between the defense pod and engine nacelle. i dont know , i didnt see your plans.

i dont compare your airfoil with real airplane airfoils , i compare with the firefox model pics , the thinkinrussian pics, and the movie itself.dvd captures, and its like me too thick.

im waiting for your answer for the question of the fuselage former at the airbrake roots, they must be slightly more curved in a near 90 degrees arc.i understand the implications of that change its not a local modification the efect of that modification extend across the fuselage .

i dont see ,except one, your exclusive pics that you claim, i dont question your sources, only i note those differences between your model and the firefox ever see and ever know.

thanks for your attention,im very glad for comunicate with a very talented modeler, a probed firefox fan ,like me.

ps.may i post pics to the forum?

Ps. looking in thinkinrussian.org/gallery , i found the pic CLINT31C this shows a model landed in an artic environment with a rare lenghtened nose landing gear, may be this was the rc modificated model.

cool! I provided most of those pics to thinkinrussian.org actually. I got em from a variety of sources including the Cinematographer, Cenifex, AirProgress, the Program book, and a rare hard back book on Special Effects( pic of shirtless guy(dykstra?) checking the miniature). I also have 9 Apogee technical drawings and used these, as well as my personal photos of the plane to make the masters.

Now about the modifications you discuss…checking reference, that article refers to the modification for the study model first made. I have some photos of this model, it’s about 4 to 5 ft long, but I’m not sure about sharing the photos, would have to ask permission first. You can see one photo of it in Cenifex. The final filming model was modified from this Greg Jien design. I talked to Greg personally on this and he said he was involved in the early stages of this design prototyping, but that Mr Eastwood liked the plane so much, he wouldnt let Apogee change much when modifying it for the flying model. the model described in the 1982 Cenimatagrapher is discussing these changes from this prototype… lol :)does my ramble make any sense at all???.

You are correct that the wing tip I have is from the Voskov plane(Pyrotechnic miniature), but all planes at the point of production came from the same molds, and were laid up the same way with the carbon fibre and inner foam core construction to the best of my knowledge. in fact all the planes were designed to fly but because of weather conditions and flight characteristics of the design, all thoughts( plus the crashes) caused them to change their minds and use the motion control rigs instead… so in essence, no “other” 63" planes were made for this, they just rigged up the r/c foxes. Ok, in answer to your studio wing thickness concern, the studio 63" miniatures’ widest cross-section on the airfoil is 1.410" where it meets the intake, making it .529" on a 1/32 scale model…also finishing up on the wing tip measurements are as follows:.932 on the wing tip making it .350 for a 1/32 scale conversion, my main wing is .462", ,a difference of .061" too thin actually, but if necessary, I will remedy this.

also my drawings include the following:

  1. All views of the Firefox

  2. nozzels and turkey feather patterns

  3. placement of ducted fan, and application

  4. McDonell Douglas Landging gear, nose gear and main

5.instruments for cockpit( this drawing sint what they ended up using. Bendix did the mockup

6 main wing cross sections and profiles

  1. cockpit and nose area, showing canards and how they function, also includes a close up of the nose discussing and giving vital information about angles used to form it.

8.wing tip cross-sections and profiles, angle to main wing included

  1. Vertical stabilizers cross sections profiles and bonus of assembly drawings for landing gear doors.

hope this helps a bit…

Sincerely,

Will

and as per you asking here’s a pic of the intake airbrake area of the filming miniature

Man, I gotta git me one of these!!! This is awesome!! Loved that Bird!

In first place thank you very much for so good and unpublished images, never before seen so clearly. but is inevitable to notice that drawings are not the definitive firefox, is very similar to the Baranovich plans although with some differences. pods of motor protuberantes towards the sides and something backwards. no pods in trailing edge, the trailing edge is like in the Baranovich plane. air brakes On advanced position, near to the leading edge, thats sees clearly in the lateral View. it appears an area shaded in the base of the fin, is perhaps the outline of a modification? all this makes think me that it is a not yet definitive plane, very near, if, but even with differences. it is evident that the carved wood model that shown us is based on this plans, this note how the fuselage diminishes its wide one until being with the motors, this is another point in which difference of firefox definitive. the photography of firefox is a jewel and shows the zone in which this the discrepancy of the brakes.thats dark panel shows with clarity two sections to the fuselage in this area .may i ask to him as the brakes of their model would be look when they are unfolded? and the answer is: very close .they are located in a section of little curvature .this photo has made it evident. i read your explanation that contradicts much in the writing in the publication that before mention(american cinematografer) and I have left to ask to me :the versions of apogee were changed? Grant McCune lies? Dykstra lies? what they say there is that one you see had the models of movement control adapted the existing molds to produce rc models, and at the moment at which already they are had molds are so that there is something definitive that to produce, what is not the case of a prototype, that there were many, is an image in black and white which it shows them in a Japanese page. but this does not matter in the end, only matters that so similar to the model seen in the film , the model can to be. this plans seems to correspond with seen frontal and back views in the trailer of the film. the image that shows to us of the model is a jewel in clarity, thanks for this. and it is here where the different proportion between the wide total of the motors in the upper view against the wide one of the intermediate section of the motors is seen, that is to say, wide that have the fuselage when it is with the motors, in the plane and its model seems to be a proportion near 1/6 and photos known firefox show a proportion near 1/5. something but wide, this can be appreciated in thinkinrussian/gallery (SFXshot_01.jpg) one you see but thanks for the photography, the one that allows us to compare it with the many photos that of that section to shown to us.

thanks for your attention and thats unavaluable images Mr Babington.and I hope that my poor use of the English has been comprehensible .

Ok this is getting fun , glad you got to see this model in progress…I also have updated photos to show now as well. I guess I better refer back to the Apogee drawings for answering your questions. To be honest, I would say that the 5 view drawings were about three generations before the final version, however, they do call out and show close ups of details, side elevation and top elevation specifically which became present in the final production version. it was from these partial drawings, I found that I actually had the entire definitive shape and contours for the Firefox as we fans remember it. just had to take the plans down to my local Kinkos and use the blueprint machine to scale up or down and cut and paste. The final result was an exacting contour and shape for the 63" final film version. including the slight downward angle to the nose area. This drawing is not shown, but I will share a bit of the nose to give you an idea. I also extrapolated the information for the vertical stabilizers based on the info and photos I have. You are totally right in that the drawing photo I showed had discrepancies, but these have all been accounted for in this replica. In my experience, I never yet been able to build a replica prop or otherwise using only provided planes. they are at best a documentation or guideline, nothing more. I was quite happily surprised after doing the cut and paste at the final drawings of the main features I required to make this plane “right” or as best that I can without taking a mold off the original…I don’t see this happening in the forgeable future, though I would jump if the chance arose, based on whatever the owner, if any felt was fair . Anyway…back to the discussion here. To your statement about Dykstra and McCune. Not saying they are liars, nor would I ever. I totally respect and admire their work, a fan of Grant actually! I think you misinterpreted what I was trying to say. I’ll try to clarify. The study model was just that, a study model or prototype, this is the one the Greg Jien designed. This is the one that basically nailed down the basic shape and lines of the plane(before refinements were made). When Grant and the model guys including Sheppard(R/C guy) got the design they made these changes for it to be airworthy…errr sort of lol… It was this final master pattern that was molded and cast to produce the R/C planes mentioned. here’s where the confusion is I think. All I was trying to say is that since these R/C planes met certain fates(crashes), they converted the remaining R/C model miniatures for motion control rigs, to be flown by wire. Since these miniatures were the final design, there was no additional model made for this scale. I hope this clarifies what I meant to say. Again most of the photos you mention I provided to that web page, I have lots as I’ve been studying this plane for many, many years, and starting in 2000, the actual Hero miniature.

Will

did finally get the master pattern all finalized for molds. this involved the primering,sanding, and removal of all the masks for the actual mold process…still waiting on rtv/sheet wax shippment to arrive…
warning!!! pics intense
Best,
Will

Hi Mr Babington

Ok, in the origin of that discussion about the genealogy of firefox is your asset :…" but the motion control model miniatures were originally intended to fly radio control, therefore having the air foil a little thicker than normal for rigidity." as an explanation to the apparent thickness of the wings of your model .

My point is that although they have been intended to be modified for rc the original models of control motion, these have a wing of thin profile but, so and as we see in the photos and film it as well as in the model of complete size. and then of these original ones, the modified versions made, perhaps with wings but heavy to make it flyables, it is logical, but it is not this modification the one that mainly is seen in the movie.

the original plane that shows to us is most interesting in spite of not being the definitive one. but the clarity jewel to which I talk about is to airbrakes.jpg the one that there is to put next to Prmr15.jpg to notice the differences.

or compare primer9.jpg with that first image of the original model that I publish, that of the belly of firefox. inferior jet intakes, compare the way in which it is with the side of the engine nacelle post-776-1114488342.jpg, where are this pic?if your calculations and measurements were correct, is incomprehensible that not looks equal .

good bye,until next post, Mr. first secretary ,both we tried to obtain he same objective: to catch to firefox!!..in an accurate scale model.

ps.its disturbing to me so that they did not give credit him greg jien by its creation in that I articule of american cinematographer.

you are correct, the motion control Foxes were actually the Radio controlled ones, or the other way round :). These were also the ones used primarly in the film ie…Seen the most. The model miniature I’m basing my replica off of is the rare long nose version, much sleeker, the Hero. This is the version I have the most reference on. Now there’s going to be discrepencies here and there, I’m sure , without taking molds and castings off the original, there’s no way around it. But rest assured, it will be the most accurate one out there. yes on the wing thickness but this is based off the flying model and taken into account as this will be scanned at a later point for a large 1/8th scale R/C Flying version. Once I have my two halves in hollow resin castings I may do some final refining , but this is essentially what I wanted to end up with on overall shapes and contours. is this the pic you are wondering about??? one of my favs actually…

Hi Mr Prime Secretary

Thaks for this new pic,the bottom view is not the same but is better in show the general aspect .

i found a difference in the canard position between the flyng scenes and full scale model with the firefox who landing in the floe,some advanced in position ,almost a canard chord lenght forward, i presume thats another variation of the rc.

lenghtned version,hmm very interesting.

that was the reason you modified the model in 1/36 you have owned?changing for a cockpit hollow section?whats the original in 1/36 ,the black model or the orange silicone mold?is a complete mold?

there is something intrigues to me of the full scale firefox, how are the transmission between the vw engine and the wheels? I do not see as it is possible .not obvious like in teh flyng wing of “raiders” or the f.16 like plane in “jewel of nile”

thaks form the pics .I am sure that in the end you obtained a irreprochable model, a real food of nostalgia. i will be very gratefull if you published a photo of this model similar to Prmr12.jpg but with a more angle of view . an upper view of the original model.