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Showing posts with label Ka-50. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ka-50. Show all posts

5.6.24

Kamov's multi-year painting process, new scheme

If I have ever seemed a bit slow with my projects, just think about this: the Project Assistant I had started painting this Ka-50 in 2016. The plan at that point was to paint it to look like a flying pig.



Immediately in February 2024 she got inspired to paint the Helo a bit more. This time the colours chosen were blue (Citadel Ahriman Blue) and pink (VGC 72013 Squid Pink). Over the years four of the blades had fallen off from the double beaters, but I knew where two of them were kept and the other two were either completely lost or just next to the long-term storage facilities.



The beautiful February idea was to keep on painting until it was done, but as anyone looking at the timestamp of this post could guess that the plan was revisited and left for more inspired moments. Who knew, maybe it got worked on before the next 7-year season had passed?

29.3.17

Helo priming

A ghostly white 'copter

Without any weird explanations: I finally sat down with the Ka-50 and the white primer to get some painting done. This took a couple of short moments on two days. As I always tend to do these things. The white primer worked here nicely, as my Project Assistant was going to use bright and light colours in any case. There would be less issues with paint coverage this way.



Kamov assembly

The Black Shark and its pointy teeth

The building process was pretty typical. First I piled up the bits of the pilot's workstation and then forgot it for days. Then I started working on the rocket pods and the missile launchers. First things first, the 80mm S-8 rockets, which consisted of a couple of pieces per launcher and the pylons to top it up.


Next I built the 130mm AT missiles, of type 9K121 Vikhr (NATO: AT-16 Scallion) and there was a good load of them. I didn't really have a clue of how good those have been but I'd guess that twelve missiles would be good enough for a couple of tanks and/or tanklike vehicles.




The double mixer

I have always liked the counter-rotating blade setup that a bunch of Soviet and later Russian helos have used. They've just looked neat (and it was great fun flying with them in OFP). The mechanical and structural complicatedness has been something I haven't looked into much care, but by the Empire, the yule tree that was to be built...




The helicopter's airframe was a simple two-piece build, all the extra bits (such as the wings, exhaust pipes and so on) fit like noses on faces. It was a very pleasant build. The most bothersome piece was the 30mm autocannon (Shipunov 2A42) thanks to its flimsiness, I was a bit afraid that it'd just snap off in two when I was cutting it off the sprue. That's also why I didn't drill out the end like I had wanted to.




The rotor blades (6) settled in nicely, except for one. To support it I left the xacto blade's arm under it while the setup was curing overnight. When I checked it later on it looked just fine.




At this time the infamous real world started being a bit on the way of hobbies and I was pretty low on spare time. The priming was to be done "whenever I get to" and as always, the painting itself was going to be on the mercy of the artist's whims. Earlier these may have had weeks in between, so the Project Mumblings will return to the story of the Ka-50 when we can. Hopefully sooner than in half a year or so.

22.3.17

Project IV/17

The Project Assistant's assault helo

Last autumn we visited the Hobbyscapua again and my assistant grabbed a Ka-50 assault helicopter from the shelf the same instant I had said that "I've always wanted one of those or the two-seater version". Kids these days... Oh well, it was all the same, I was going to get to build it and then observe the forming of the paintjob - safely from the side.


The assembly instructions fit on a single sheet. The painting instrcutions could've been thrown away immediately as they weren't going to be followed anyway. I also assumed that the decals were going to be skipped.




All the bits fit into two sprues again plus then there were two transparent pieces and a set of not-so-military-looking decals. I didn't expect that building this was going to take many sessions.