Flyingbabydoc
Well-known member
Hello dear friends,
In between models for the COF campaign I was wondering which would be a true workhorse and I guess to me None is more apt for that Definition than the Mig-21. Almost 13000 built (more than any other aircraft post WWII), served and still serves in 18 countries! I guess this incredible aircraft deserved my Attention.
I am going to build the Revell Kit of the early Version (Fishbed C, MiG-21 F-13) which was the Adaptation of the original MiG-21 to carry the AA-2 copies of the SideWinder Missile (which fell in Soviet Hands after the chinese brought one unexploded home stuck on the engine of a MiG-15!). Decals by Begemot from Russia and PE from Eduard.
This particular aircraft is also very interesting, as it belonged to the 213rd IAP and was transferred from the Soviet Union to Cuba during the Missile Crisis of 1962. This is one of the aircraft seen in the famous satellite photos which actually began the crisis. Since it was moved rather fast, the Soviet Red Stars were simply painted over with a White circle. It served at Santa Clara AB in December 1962 and only after the Missile crisis was over it was moved to Santo Antonio AB in Havana and handed over to the Cuban Air Force.
Thanks for watching and for your comments,
Cheers
Alex
In between models for the COF campaign I was wondering which would be a true workhorse and I guess to me None is more apt for that Definition than the Mig-21. Almost 13000 built (more than any other aircraft post WWII), served and still serves in 18 countries! I guess this incredible aircraft deserved my Attention.
I am going to build the Revell Kit of the early Version (Fishbed C, MiG-21 F-13) which was the Adaptation of the original MiG-21 to carry the AA-2 copies of the SideWinder Missile (which fell in Soviet Hands after the chinese brought one unexploded home stuck on the engine of a MiG-15!). Decals by Begemot from Russia and PE from Eduard.
This particular aircraft is also very interesting, as it belonged to the 213rd IAP and was transferred from the Soviet Union to Cuba during the Missile Crisis of 1962. This is one of the aircraft seen in the famous satellite photos which actually began the crisis. Since it was moved rather fast, the Soviet Red Stars were simply painted over with a White circle. It served at Santa Clara AB in December 1962 and only after the Missile crisis was over it was moved to Santo Antonio AB in Havana and handed over to the Cuban Air Force.
Thanks for watching and for your comments,
Cheers
Alex