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- #21
JKim
Senior Master Sergeant
More gun work on the Nachtjager... after the mounting boot of the rear gun was cleaned up, I glued the brass barrel into place.
Next, I took a look at the guns in the ventral tray. The G-6 carried four MG151/20 20mm cannon in a ventral tray after experiences with the C-series indicated that the muzzle flash from the nose-mounted weapons were distracting to the pilot at night. Only the long barrels of the cannon are represented in the kit. The barrels are nice and round with hardly any hint of a mold line. But... those darned ejector pin marks! Their is one right at the business end of each barrel.
It would be difficult to remove those marks while keeping the end of barrels circular in cross section so I decided to replace the barrels with brass tubing. The tricky part is that the guns are oriented at a slight angle downward so maintaining that angle for all four guns would be very important. I wanted to use the base of the kit part but there is not much plastic there. I didn't think I could maintain a consistent angle by simply butting up the new brass barrel against the base of the kit part. I decided to use pieces of smaller diameter brass tubing that could be attached more securely into holes drilled into the base part. Once the small tubing is glued into place in the correct orientation, I could simply slide the larger tubing into place.
I did this one barrel at a time so that I could use the remaining barrel as a reference to get the proper angle. The smaller diameter brass tubing is glued into a hole drilled with a micro drill bit.
Then the gun barrel is slid over the mounting tube and secured into place.
The other barrel is then cut off and the installation process is repeated.
The joint is much more secure than if I had tried a simple butt joint.
I placed the guns in the ventral tray to check orientation of the gun barrels. Notice the square ports on the ventral tray.
Since there is no gun body detail included, I was worried about the view through those square openings. I decided to close up the bigger central ports with brass sheeting. I cut a piece of sheet styrene as form guide, first checking to see that it fit into the port with some room to spare.
I folded small strips of brass sheeting over the piece of styrene. I used a PE bending tool to square up the joints and then fit the rectangular brass tubes into the ports. Hopefully, painting the interior of the ventral tray and new ejection ports black will be enough to block the view into empty space.
The Ju88G-6 also featured twin 20mm cannon mounted on the top of the fuselage firing at an oblique angle. The Shrage-Musik installation is provided by the kit as two types of gun barrels... one with a conical flash depressor and one without. Due to the same type of ejector pin marks found on the ventral guns, I decided to replace these with brass tube as well.
I decided to use the same technique even though a simple butt joint with CA glue might have been sufficient here due to the shortness of the barrels.
I also jumped to the engine cowlings to take a look at some possible issues there. The engine cowling halves were glued together (very nice fit BTW!). The kit provides two sets of cowl flaps, open and closed. I've always liked the flared look of open cowl flaps. Doesn't this look very Dora-ish? Not surprising given the shared powerplant.
But using the open flaps will require thinning of the edges and to somehow dress up this view into the back of circular radiator, which is currently plain plastic. I wonder if I could work something up with a compass cutter? If not, there is also the closed flaps.
Next, I took a look at the guns in the ventral tray. The G-6 carried four MG151/20 20mm cannon in a ventral tray after experiences with the C-series indicated that the muzzle flash from the nose-mounted weapons were distracting to the pilot at night. Only the long barrels of the cannon are represented in the kit. The barrels are nice and round with hardly any hint of a mold line. But... those darned ejector pin marks! Their is one right at the business end of each barrel.
It would be difficult to remove those marks while keeping the end of barrels circular in cross section so I decided to replace the barrels with brass tubing. The tricky part is that the guns are oriented at a slight angle downward so maintaining that angle for all four guns would be very important. I wanted to use the base of the kit part but there is not much plastic there. I didn't think I could maintain a consistent angle by simply butting up the new brass barrel against the base of the kit part. I decided to use pieces of smaller diameter brass tubing that could be attached more securely into holes drilled into the base part. Once the small tubing is glued into place in the correct orientation, I could simply slide the larger tubing into place.
I did this one barrel at a time so that I could use the remaining barrel as a reference to get the proper angle. The smaller diameter brass tubing is glued into a hole drilled with a micro drill bit.
Then the gun barrel is slid over the mounting tube and secured into place.
The other barrel is then cut off and the installation process is repeated.
The joint is much more secure than if I had tried a simple butt joint.
I placed the guns in the ventral tray to check orientation of the gun barrels. Notice the square ports on the ventral tray.
Since there is no gun body detail included, I was worried about the view through those square openings. I decided to close up the bigger central ports with brass sheeting. I cut a piece of sheet styrene as form guide, first checking to see that it fit into the port with some room to spare.
I folded small strips of brass sheeting over the piece of styrene. I used a PE bending tool to square up the joints and then fit the rectangular brass tubes into the ports. Hopefully, painting the interior of the ventral tray and new ejection ports black will be enough to block the view into empty space.
The Ju88G-6 also featured twin 20mm cannon mounted on the top of the fuselage firing at an oblique angle. The Shrage-Musik installation is provided by the kit as two types of gun barrels... one with a conical flash depressor and one without. Due to the same type of ejector pin marks found on the ventral guns, I decided to replace these with brass tube as well.
I decided to use the same technique even though a simple butt joint with CA glue might have been sufficient here due to the shortness of the barrels.
I also jumped to the engine cowlings to take a look at some possible issues there. The engine cowling halves were glued together (very nice fit BTW!). The kit provides two sets of cowl flaps, open and closed. I've always liked the flared look of open cowl flaps. Doesn't this look very Dora-ish? Not surprising given the shared powerplant.
But using the open flaps will require thinning of the edges and to somehow dress up this view into the back of circular radiator, which is currently plain plastic. I wonder if I could work something up with a compass cutter? If not, there is also the closed flaps.