Finally got started on my Revell 1:72 DC-4. This model will be huge when it is finished! Anyway, here is the cockpit sans seats. Sorry the picture is not well focused- I’ll try to do better next time.
This will be a major project! The part numbers go into the mid 200s, but because there are many pieces with same part numbers, the actual parts count is far more. For instance, there are 22 half rows of seats with same part number. Each engine and cowl part number has four pieces with same number. And many dozens of parts are tiny! This kit is not for the novice.
I’ll be following this build too, Don. The DC-4/C-54 has always been on of my favorite airplanes. I know it’s going to be a while, but what livery will the finished model have?
This thing is really testing my 81 year old hands! And the seat belts are molded into the seats. Not so bad doing crew seats, but then there are forty plus passenger seats with belts to paint. I am tempted not to paint the seats. The belts look funny-like you’d have to be sitting sideways in the seats to buckle the belts. The pilot and co-pilot seats are an assembly of three parts. The frames are a real challenge to handle.
Very little flash on any parts, and molding is crisp with great detail.
A neat feature of this kit is that the fuselage has interior panels along sides. Windows are sandwiched between outer skin and the interior side panels. No luggage shelves above, but it still will look neat.
I have the Minicraft 1/144 scale DC-4 in my stash. Might do it up later this year. Of course not nearly the detail of your Revell kit, Don. I’m thinking M.A.T.S. livery.
The DC-6 and DC-7 were also tri-gear. There was a DC-5 prototype which never saw production that was sort of a follow-on to the DC-3 (twin engine), and that was a trike also. Douglas seemed to cede the short haul, shorter route to others (Martin and Convair).
I sure will try for balance. A lot of the interior detail is up front, but the interior walls probably will make it tail-heavy. However, fortunately Revell shows the amount of weight needed in the instructions, and I have a postal scale to weigh it out. Also, the instructions show exactly where to place the weight.
Here is a mockup of how the cockpit with seats will look against the rest of the interior. I guess that compartment right behind the pilot/copilot section is for the flight engineer- though the jump seat in it looks more like what a stewardess would use. There is another section yet to put on the floor, before the seats, and that looks like a stewardess section. Does anyone know if the -4 had a flight engineer position?
Next will be a tedious job. There are 44 seats, each with five colors. Largest area is blue, which I will airbrush. Remaining colors are brown, beige, white and silver. Way to small to mask off easily. I will be handpainting these remaining colors. However, the seatbelts, molded into the seats, the beige and silver, are very narrow (toothpick details) and I may hold up the side against the floor with a couple of seats in place, to see how visible the belts are. I am not one to paint or install detail that cannot be seen, just because I will know it is there. In fact, I have left off a little radio piece in that flight engineer(?) station because I don’t think it will be able to be seen.
I became curious and did some snooping. Found some things that suggest it might have been a radio compartment, or radio operator compartment, or radio officer compartment.
I’m not sure, just passing along some Googling results.
Wow Don. This is going to be beautiful. And tedious. And time consuming. And VERY rewarding. Love this kit…I have one civilian and one C-54, both in Revell 1/72, and am a big fan. Looking forward to following your build. Please DO post pictures and “how-tos” and “I did this’s.” The cockpit looks oputstanding. Who cares if WE can’t see it??? YOU know its there! [bgr]
The inner fuselage walls are different for the two kits. I won’t be using my C-54 interior at all. My DC-4 has blanked out windows, and the cargo door will be closed.
First plane I flew in was Orville and His brother’s thingy .LOL.LOL. No Really this does actually bring back memories .Like Trains, I have ridden in some civilian history makers .Starting with the D.C.3 and all the way to a 747 and a lot of others in between .My all time fave was the D.C.-7-C, and let’s not forget the sexiest plane in history, the Lockheed Constellation ( mainly the 1049 edition .) Was that the long nose or short ?
Of course my own a/c won’t get short shrift in memory though I won’t mention them .The others I’ve flown in were a Beaver and Otter and an Antonov heavy lifter ! ( The first edition ) Yeah , Got over my fears in the lumbering beast ! In the back no less !
I can fly again and the most enjoyable was being at the controls of the old Cessna 180 That a friend owns .No More though . I would imagine the TIA will shut down my flying in the office . Darn! but I did it ! T.B.
Just noticed something- the instructions call for wheel wells to be aluminum color, but box art shows them zinc chromate (green). Anyone know for sure what color Douglas painted wheel wells in the forties?