That is a great build and review. One look at that wingspan and Ive decided Im never buying a B-36 kit. No parking space. lol.
LOL! I hear you n that! It is HUGE. You can see on our kitchen island how it hangs over on each side.
We raided five kids…the youngest has been out of the house ofr seven years. So, I am going to get a room for displaying the models…and I need it.
I have numerous large 1/350 scalewarships…particularly the aircraft carriers that take up space. (USS Enterprise, Chinese Liaoning, Russian Kuznetsov, USS Wasp, French Charles de Gaulle, Japanese Hyuga, HMS Illustrios, etc.)
…and also a bunch of 1/72 scale models. My large ones so far are:
AC-130H Gunship
B-36J Peacemeaker
Tu-95MS Bear
P-8A Poseidon
But I still have a BUNCH more to build…and now, no place to put them. These include all of the following:
B-52
XB-70
Tu-160
Space Shuttle
B1-B Lancer
B-2A Spirit
I simply have to wait to build those now until I have more space.
Hehehe…if you guys ever want to try a really BIG 1/72 scael model…and I beleive it is the largest there is…then try Anigrand’s resin, 1/72 scael C-5 Galaxy!
41" long and 37" wingspan.
But it aint cheap. $328 + shipping. I have never had one and simply cannot justify that type of expense for the kit.
They make good kits. I built their XC-142A and they did a nice job. I may buy their F-8U3 CrusaderII which competed against the F-4 Phantom and was not chosen, even though it excelled in every way. But the US Navy wanted two engines and two piltos and Vought bucked that trend and lost. Five of them were built and several were used by NASA for years.
Ive always felt like an Air Boss on a carrier; so many planes (well, not just planes), so little space.
Whenever I place a bet on the lottery and wifey asks me what Id do if I win, I always answer with “a far bigger house and a far bigger hobby room.” And thats so I can then go an buy such ludicrously big kits as the 1/72 C-5 Galaxy. lol.
I would LOVE to build that Anigrand 1/72 scale C-5…it is just too expensive, not to mention the space!
I added a youytube video of the model:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sogC0Iad0ag&feature=youtu.be
Thanks for the great video, I have this beast in my stash. One of my favorite movies is Strategic Air Command with Jimmy Stewart. Fantastic flying scenes of the B-36.
Mike
The Monogram B-36 Peacemaker isn’t a new kit by all means. They’ve been around since the 70s. I should know, I built one in my youth years. Yes, it does take up a bit of parking space to display. I never could remember what happened to mine. I do know what happened to the Monogram B-52 kit though. It was stored in my parents’ house attic for many years until we had to do a clean out in 2010.
Monogram came out with the first 1/72 scale model of this in 1980.
It has been re-released four or five times by them (the one I built came out in 1989), with the latest in 2009 being a RB-36H.
Revell also came out with their own in 2002, but had previously released a version with Monogram in 1997 I believe.
So, yes, they have been around a long time.
I bought mine several years ago, but then decided to build it last year after seeing (again…for maybe the 8th time) Strategic Air Command on Veteran’s Dya.
GREAT kit.
I’ve always thought that this kit was really awesome. I built one when I was assigned at Andrews (when it was an Air Force Base) and I was assigned at Malcolm Grow Hospital. I had it hanging from the ceiling in my shop near the flight line. Base commander showed up and wanted tp buy it. Who could say “No”? I’ve got 2 more now. Gonna build them simultaneously. An RB-36H and a B-36J.
I agree whole heartidly.
I loved building this model.
I love its story and the ti in to Jimmy Stewart.
Have a lot of fun and please create a build thread. I am still going to scratch build a thrmo-nuclear bomb and its carrier to add to this model…but too busy on my 1/350 scale Ronald Reagan right now…hehehe!
Here’s the link:
http://cs.finescale.com/fsm/modeling_subjects/f/7/t/173536.aspx
Jeff, really good job on a classic model and aircraft. I’ve told my story before on the Forum, but I’ll repeat it for you. Saw the movie several times. In the '50s, B-36s flew over Kansas often. You could hear the unique sound as they approached from miles away. Saw the one at Dayton and the nukes. My wife’s uncle was the flight engineer on one and told me about walking inside the wing in flight to tune an inboard engine. I had to build the model as an adult of one of the most impressive aircraft ever. They are large even as a model and hanging in my office was the only way I could display it. It makes me smile everytime I pass by it. [8-|]
Thanks for sharing your build of a modeling classic!
Max
Thank you!
…and what a beautiful build. Nice scratch build on the thremo-nuclear bomb!
One day I will scratch build one myself, and I want to build it on that cart they used to wheel it uner the aircraft.
Yours looks stunning there and I thank you for sharing it with us.
I made need to hang m,ine up like that one day:
Thanks Jeff, In case you missed it we had quite a disscussion on nukes and scratch building under Scratchbuilding/Nuclear Weapons that was fun and discussed several weapons even the 50 MT Russian monster. Check it out on the Forum below!
Max
Thanks! I will do so!
Extremely nice build. Excellent execution! Bravo, just bravo!
Toshi
Jeff: Speaking of the Anigrand kit, here’s some photos my wife and I took of that kit along with their KC-10, both in 1/72. A very impressive diorama to say the least! This was taken at an IPMS show in Dayton,Ohio in 2016.
All I can say to that is WOW! Just, WOW!
Those two huge aircraft together.
That C-5B in 1/72 scale, a 41" long and with a 37" wingspan, has to be the largest scale model on the market. The Russian aircraft would be bigger, but I do not know if anyone makes one.
Here’s a site where anothjer guy bnuilt the C-5B.
http://www.ninfinger.org/karld/My%20Space%20Museum/c-5.htm
He did a sterlinbg job…but having the DC-10 refueling the C-5B is unbeatable.
They (ANnigrand) do make a 1/72 C141 and C00141B, as well as the C-17 (which I am eyeing).
My next Anigrand model though will probably be the F8U-3 in honor of my Dad who was the principle dynamics engineer at Vought Aeronautics at the time and was a lead on the F-7, F-8 Crusaer, A-7 Corsair II, the XF8U-3, and the XC-142A.
He has been gone now for 14 years, but long ago I made hm a three aircraft display of the F-7, F-8E, and A-7E in 1/72 scale when he retired in the late 1990s. (Thise were the ones that got into production and were deployed all over the world.
Hello, fellow B-36 fans.
I’m retired with time on my hands and have recently returned to modeling after a 50 year break. I recently purchased a Monogram 5703 B36 model on EBay, and found this thread while looking for building tips.
My late father was a B-36 Master Mechanic who was assigned to both the 72d SRW at Ramey AFB, PR and 92d BW at Fairchild AFB, WA. I was stationed at Chanute from 1975 to 78, and he loved to walk around the behemoth and reminisce.
He lived in Illinois, and was “drafted” to assist in preparing the Chanute plane for transfer to Castle AFB. My brother was an aircraft mechanic assigned at Castle at the time, and went TDY to Chanute. I believe they spent over a month on the mammoth task, and my dad was in hog heaven. My brother marveled that dad knew and remembered so much about the workings of that plane.
He had one of these models hanging in his home, and I’m building this one in his honor. I hope mine turns out half as well as yours. Great detailed writeup!
From viewing Jeff’s profile, it appears he is no longer with us. If anyone else following the thread has built this behemoth, I have a question.
I also plan to add all the intricate wing decals, and I’m thinking it might be easier to work with by applying them all before attaching the wings to the fuselage. Has anyone done it that way, or are there issues I’m unaware of?
Thanks.