Sunday, March 17, 2024

USS iNDIANAPOLIS - 1944; Trumpeter; 1/350 On the bench March 2024

This is the USS Indianapolis - 1944 in dazzle paint.  The Indy is remembered as much for the Robert Shaw soliloquy about being sunk and losing crew to shark infested waters more than the battle stars won in WWII.  I want to stay removed from the infamy and build a fine ship.  As warships builds go this follows the Academy Warspite,  Trumpeters USS Texas,  USS Buckley and HMS Dreadnought.  There are other reasons for me picking the 1944 kit:  The Dazzle paint, both catapults (the starboard was removed in the 1945 refit); included PE and the SOC Seagull bi-planes, which brings us to this first post.
The Seagulls are in the kit instructions as the last construction.  However; I chose to start with them just as I did with the Walrus during the Warspite build.  This fed my DIY appetite by considering building one Seagull straight up as can be seen here and the other with wings folded back being pulled from the storage deck (more about the storage deck later).  The planes are molded clear so some paint is applied followed by decals - easier that way.  the challenge was how to make the wings in the fold back position?
I used the xacto saw blade with the wings on the sprue,
You can see how the wings are folded - hinged - but how best to do this?
First I folded back the bottom wing, but realized the difficulty of this plus  the brittle clear did not hold this shape.  Therefore; I separated the wings from the center portion that connects to the fuselage.
I put the fuselage together and attached both wing center portions.
I built the outer wing portions using a paper jig to hold the position of the wings and pontoon while glue set.  Now I had to figure how best to attach the wing sections.
I used a small piece of 26 gauge wire glued to the center wing portion and bent outward so that I could glue to the underside of the upper wing.
first one side, let dry then the other side.
With both wings attached I could add drop of glue to the point where the bottom wing hinge would be.
After attaching the center pontoon and finish painting I had to attach the tail planes.  Being cheap, I don't spend $ on fancy jigs and such, but rather make do with what I have on hand to hold things in place while delicate attachments are attempted.  The arrangement held the SOC in place so one hand could hold a tailplane to the fuselage and the other hand held the cement brush.
And there you have two Seagulls put aside until needed.  ON TO THE SHIP!
Let's begin with a PE discussion.  The kit includes PE for cranes, catapults, radar and stairs which is great, but it is very short on ladders and railings so an extra purchase is necessary.
Care is required as many of the PE pieces are extremely small.
Painting must be done as assemblies progress for a dazzle scheme such as this.
Little pieces of wire are bent and snipped off to be used as shoulder rests on the gun mounts.  I'm to cheap to buy after market guns, plus the PE versions are so detailed as to take much time to build with mistakes and waste that I can't tolerate.  Let's see if this works.
Not too bad on the twin mounts (PE is in the kit) and ammo drums are molded. Careful painting is the key to creating detail.
Stack walk ways are delicate and always a pain to construct.
I found a historic photo of the 5" mounts used on the Indianapolis. The rails at the front of the mount I had to fabricate from pieces of after market railing.
They turned out fairly well with the painting detail. A twin mount is also shown.
The instructions show all the pieces for the 5" mount, not including the hand rails I added.
Here is something odd. Trumpeter usually includes anchor chain, but not here. My nephew had extra. Thanks Matt.!
Wine foil is used to simulate the folding door for the Seagull.
Here is how it looks after painting deck blue and placing a Seagull.  This is the first warship with a painted deck instead of a laser cut wood deck.
As with previous ships I masked the plimsol line and hand paint the hull with my mix of hull red.  Two coats with a wide brush does the trick!
Dazzle pattern in accordance with the painting guide.
Main turrets detailed with ladders and paint.  Did I drill out the ends of the barrels? Why of course!
Now we are adding stairs and mounts etc.
Rigging required the addition of PE remnants to the mast(s). Rigging is always a DIY.  I use monofilament thread which you will see later.
I am tying thread to ladder pieces which will be glued to the deck.
Once the ladder section(s) with the monofilament are tied down and glued to the deck, it can be tied off on the mast arm.
A detailed photo of rigging and PE.
Quad Bofors with additional railing added.
Gun mounts in place.
A big pain is rolling the float baskets. They never really turn out right, but I have to roll them and glue them in place. Yuk!
Here are a bunch, and now I have to glue them down with cyano!
The baskets are tough to paint also!
Extremely delicate bracing for the stern tripod!
But I got it done along with the other PE.
After that the radar, railings and ladder was easy!
Now to the PE crane boom and DIY cable.
Here it is mounted and the hook is ready to lift the Seagull.
Some dry fit for desired orientation.
Why did I include this photo? Oh, it is the seagull on the catapult. I used some PE flat stock to make the shuttle for launching the aircraft from the catapult.
More railing placed.
Some additional wire DIY for the staves.
Finalizing the rigging between masts before completion photos.  This post is only composed of highlights I have chosen.  Its probably half of the photos taken during the build.
Stern - propellers were the last pieces added.
Starboard side. Notice the base matches the hull color with the plaque painted with gold and blue lettering (by hand).
This shows some of the use of Tamiya Weathering Master 
(makeup) applied.
Bow shot is a nice display of the hull weathering.
I hope you like the detail involved.  It was fun and challenging build!