John Piper, a Brit and a friend of mine, founded several model companies over the years, his last was called Scale Link. He eventually sold it and I believe it is still operating. John and I went back a lot of years. I first met him at the Model Engineering exhibition at Wembley Stadium in London back in the 70s. His Scale Link products were the first line I began importing when I started up VLS.
Anyway, years ago, he designed a Hawker Hurricane and a Fokker triplane ala The Red Baron in photo-etched brass. The fuselage, wings, tail and rudders were entirely photo-etch, each kit had a few white metal or resin parts such as the cowling, wheels and so on. I bought them and had one offs ran by our photo etching company in Massachusetts. They are gorgeous to look at, John actually built one of the triplanes and sent it to me but it arrived in pretty bad shape.
My modeler employees took one look at it and said, "No way we will ever be able to sell those". I admit, you would have to be into self torture to attempt to build one, however, I wrote them off and kept them as a kind of souvenir. John died about ten years ago and yesterday I was going through some mapping file cases looking for something and came across them. The photo-etch sheets of brass are very large, maybe 18 inches X 18 inches, (45 cm X 45 cm), and I have actually thought about framing them they are so cool looking.
My question is, does anybody have an interest in seeing photographs of those? If so, I'll take photos and post them.
Bob
Anyway, years ago, he designed a Hawker Hurricane and a Fokker triplane ala The Red Baron in photo-etched brass. The fuselage, wings, tail and rudders were entirely photo-etch, each kit had a few white metal or resin parts such as the cowling, wheels and so on. I bought them and had one offs ran by our photo etching company in Massachusetts. They are gorgeous to look at, John actually built one of the triplanes and sent it to me but it arrived in pretty bad shape.
My modeler employees took one look at it and said, "No way we will ever be able to sell those". I admit, you would have to be into self torture to attempt to build one, however, I wrote them off and kept them as a kind of souvenir. John died about ten years ago and yesterday I was going through some mapping file cases looking for something and came across them. The photo-etch sheets of brass are very large, maybe 18 inches X 18 inches, (45 cm X 45 cm), and I have actually thought about framing them they are so cool looking.
My question is, does anybody have an interest in seeing photographs of those? If so, I'll take photos and post them.
Bob