Hobby Boss F-111A Aardvark 1-48

My great “jet-a-thon” for 2020 is now done. I definitely have a case of jet fatigue on the heels of the entire Century Series and now this beast.

I apologize for the coming rant on Memorial Day, but Hobby Boss frustrates me to no end. Their kits are pretty good, come with good detail, and generally go together okay (although each one I’ve done has presented me with some challenges) - but their quality control or perhaps it’s their research leaves me wanting, particularly with regard to their instructions and painting guide. Unlike most kits that Hasegawa produces, Hobby Boss loads theirs up with ordinance, which is a good thing. But I’d sure like some information included in the kit as to what ordinance a particular aircraft actually carries. The instructions would have you load this one up with all kinds of things, but everything I found online suggested such a load-out would not be accurate. Then the mounting of something like the ALQ-87 pod is, based on actual photos I found, completely wrong, and of course the kit does not provide correct mounting parts or any note of where that thing should go (2 of them, one forward and one rear of the main landing gear, not on the wing mounts).

In the end I opted to mount a single wing rack with Mk. 82 bombs - and then, either the instructions were notoriously lacking or I did something wrong. I might actually lean toward the latter. I built this thing with the flaps deployed, and when I went to install the bomb racks, there was insufficient room to allow the bombs to fit. I then opted to just leave the bombs and their rack off (but the mounting rack is still there, although I think I may have put those on facing the wrong direction, which may account for the lack of space).

Well, I could go on with my rant, but I think I’ve said enough on the matter.

I liked the detail in this kit. The cockpit looks good, the exhaust cans look good, the wheel wells have some good stuff going on in there even though you really can’t see much once everything is in place. Parts fit pretty tightly. The primary landing gear, though, is problematic, quite wobbly. I wonder if crews experienced issues with that gear structure, similar to the well-known problems the Bf109s had. Or did I not get it installed correctly? Photos below will show an airplane that is sitting askew. There does not appear to be anything I can do about that, save for ripping the gear off and attempting to fix, a task that I am loathe to do.

The flaps are quite fragile, but I liked the look the deployed flaps give this bird.

Paints were largely the Vallejo SEA set, with some Tamiya khaki and NATO green, Model Master Metalizer jet exhaust, titanium, and aluminum, and Vallejo red and yellow. I weathered the exhaust cans with Tamiya weathering compounds, ground gray pastels on the underside, and Flory dark dirt wash on the top side. Sprayed with a good coat of Mission Models’ flat clear.

So on to the photos:

That’s it for me with jets for a while. I still have several in my stash, but I think I’m fine if I don’t see another exhaust can for a good while. Back to WWII subjects for me (and I’ve already built the Me262 and Gloster Meteor, although I do have a Monogram and Hobby Boss P-80 in the stash). Next up is a Yak-1.

Very nice model. Why don’t you mount it on a short clear peg as if landing. A lot of these kits make the gear struts at full extension, not compressed. Not the problem here, but I think it’d look good.

Nice job. And you have been cranking out the kits my friend! I second your comments about hobby boss. I’m working on my second kit and researching paint online. Weird that they dont have a single callout for interior colors. They are nice to build though. The F-111 is an impressive model and you dont see them very often. Well done…

Really nice job on that Aardvark!

Very nice build and nice paint job! Yes, Hobby Boss does make nice kits. Their P-38 goes together with no problems.

Nice paint work.

Looks like you are correct on the wing pylons…the angle should be facing forward.

Very nice work on the Aardvark. That looks real sharp. But yeah I bet you are done with jets for awhile now. And yes, on the wing pylons, you have them mounted reversed. The the 30* should be the leading edge, and the 80* side should be the trailing edge. Also they should be the same color as the wing bottom. Only the initial production F-111A aircraft had the light colors on the undersides, and those were overpainted for deployment to SEA.

I agree on the pylons being backwards. Here’s a few shots of the “A” models in South East Asia:

I had a shot of the tail from the rear, but at the moment I can’t seem to find it. The sensor at the tip of the tail was a deep blue glass. If I find the shot again I’ll post it for you.

Great job. Your SEA looks awesome. Friend of mine from college worked on ECM pods on these birds. Thanks for sharing your talents.

Yep, your camo colors are bang-on. The Hobby Boss kit is really boogered up in many major details, but once built, looks exactly like an F-111, as your build proves. And finished kits count more than stashed boxes IMO. [Y]

Well done Stephen. Let the air out of the other tire!

Thanks! I agree that would look great, but I don’t really have horizontal display space for this huge build. I hung it on my “jet wall” in one of my bedrooms.

Thank you, John! What’s odd about the interior painting is they do indicate painting for some parts, but nothing for the overall interior. At least in the F-105 and F-111 that I’ve completed recently.

Thanks!

Thank you for your kind words, Johnny!

Having built several Monogram P-38s, an Academy P-38, and a Monogram Pro-Modeler P-38 (which I think was a rebox of the Hasegawa kit), and having an original issue Monogram plus the new Tamiya P-38 kits in the stash, I doubt I’ll be doing the HB -38. Is that one of their “easy” releases, whatever they call those?

Thanks!

I didn’t actually notice the pylon issue until I was reviewing this post with the pictures. I can’t believe I made that mistake; just simple carelessness on my part. And then an ambivalent attitude since I had attached the pylons with CA and did not want to spend the time it would have required to correct the pylons, along with likely re-painting.

Thanks Stik! I had run across that detail about the underside being painted in a dark color (typically black but some earlier F-111s apparently were painted olive green on the underside as well), but I never associated that with the pylons.

Honestly, I should go ahead and fix this problem.

Thanks for all the great photos you shared!

Thank you for your kind words, Chemteacher.

-Signed, son of a chemist who spent his 35 year career with Shell Oil

Thank you for your kind words!