• Modelers Alliance has updated the forum software on our website. We have migrated all post, content and user accounts but we could not migrate the passwords.
    This requires that you manually reset your password.
    Please click here, http://modelersalliance.org/forums/login to go to logon page and use the "Forgot your Password" option.

So, you think you are a hot shot aircraft modeler?

bob letterman

Master at Arms
Staff member
Back in the 70s and 80s, I became addicted to the largest scale model show in the world. The Model Engineer Exhibition, an annual event in England that would attract more than a hundred thousand visitors each year, There were thousands of entries from static models to full working models. It was an amazing thing to see. I actually entered the competition in the 1983 show and was lucky enough to be one of the two Americans to ever win a gold medal at that event. (Loren Perry of Gold Model models in California was the other one, he named his company after it).

The event is so prestigious that the Royal family presents the awards. The surname of the royal family, Queen Elizabeth, Prince Charles, etc., is Mountbatten. Mountbatten is the family name originally adopted by a branch of the Battenberg family during World War I because of rising anti-German sentiment among the British public. On 14 July 1917, Prince Louis of Battenberg assumed the surname Mountbatten for himself and his descendants and was created Marquess of Milford Haven. The name is an Anglicization of the German Battenberg, a small town in Hesse, Germany. (Berg is German for Mountain). Marriages between the royal families in Europe were commonly used as a means of linking countries and avoiding war, although It didn't seem to help much as far as I can see.

Probably the most famous Mountbatten was Admiral Louis Mountbatten of the WW II Burma campaign. Anyway, in my case, the medal was placed around my neck with typical British pomp and circumstance by Prince Charles' nephew. It was a very memorable event, I am told the large medal is of real gold. So, now to the model. I was at every exhibition from 1979 to 1987 and was fortunate enough to have actually seen this model. It was absolutely incredible, not to mention humbling! I saw some of the most incredible models there that I will remember for the rest of my life. Who could do something like this? Check this out! The Rolls Royce Eagle.

If you click on the photos, they will enlarge.

http://www.modelenginenews.org/gallery/croft/eagle/index.html

Bob
 
Any pictures from that show? I for one would love to see them.

Dave, I have hundreds of that show and many others. Finding them is another story altogether. I will check when I get some time.

Bob
When it comes to modeling that was the golden age of model shows. All the techniques etc we take for granted comes mostly from the guys that modeled back then. :drinks

Oh and I hope there is a picture with you and the queen :evil:
 
Oh and I hope there is a picture with you and the queen ...........................

Cowabunga Uncle Bob , you have a picture of you and Elton John ?
 
An engineer/artisan and a hot shot air craft modeler are two different things Bob. The artisan did this engine while SA Dave is a hot shot aircraft modeler. (Sorry Dave but the truth has to come out sometime). :ro: :rotf :rotf :rotf :rotf
 
Reminds me if that scale Ferrari that actually runs. This guy must have intimate knowledge of that engine, don't ya think?

Hey Dad, what aircraft was it that you won all that Gold with?
 
Very interesting...what was your winning model in this compettition ?Best!

Luiz

Well Luiz, if you are expecting something like that Merlin engine, forget it! It was a Canadian CMP C-60L Mobile workshop. You can see it on my forum. Compared to that working engine, it is almost embarrassingly simple.

https://www.modelersalliance.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=88:some-ancient-builds-a-canadian-cmp-c-60l-mobile-workshop-from-83&catid=35:bob-letterman&Itemid=68

Bob
 
Any pictures from that show? I for one would love to see them.

Dave, I have hundreds of that show and many others. Finding them is another story altogether. I will check when I get some time.

Bob
When it comes to modeling that was the golden age of model shows. All the techniques etc we take for granted comes mostly from the guys that modeled back then. :drinks

Oh and I hope there is a picture with you and the queen :evil:

The only difference of back then and now is that you can buy damned near everything you need to build just about everything. All we had was a few kits, (Few and far between), and if we wanted to build something unusual we had to do it from scratch. My god, I look at the Internet today and I think every plane, tank, truck and ship ever made has been kitted. When Lewis Pruneau scratched a 1/35th scale Dora back in the early 80s, who would have ever dreamed that some manufacturer would actually release that thing as a kit, and with a price tag of $1000.00! Unbelievable!

Oh, and Dave. I do have a photo of me and the queen, but it was taken at Madame Toussad's Wax Museum. :yipee
 
Oh and I hope there is a picture with you and the queen ...........................

Cowabunga Uncle Bob , you have a picture of you and Elton John ?

No, I don't have any photos of me and either queen, for photos of celebrities, that's Saul's department!
 
Reminds me if that scale Ferrari that actually runs. This guy must have intimate knowledge of that engine, don't ya think?

Hey Dad, what aircraft was it that you won all that Gold with?

No aircraft Son,

I carried the model on my lap all the way on the plane, then the subway, and it had to be small but still eligible for the competition. All the aircraft were in 1/32nd scale and up. Mostly the old Revell and Hasegawa kits. That was back when they were under $20.
 
Way back in 1982, at the IPMS National convention, an aircraft modeler named Mark Waki entered what I still consider the most amazing model aircraft I have ever seen. You have to consider that was 32 years ago, no photo-etch, no update sets, no accessories. Even the quality of the kits were nothing compared to today. Hands down, he won Best of Show easily. These photos do not do this plane justice., even all the hinges work. Absolutely amazing.

http://www.markwaki.com/pages/Focke%20Wulf%20190%20D9%20page1.htm

Bob
 
Another great aircraft modeler passed away last year. He was Arlo Schroeder, 88 years old, served as a fighter pilot in WW II. I had the honor of meeting him and of seeing several of Arlo's incredible scratch built planes in person during the 80s. He won best of show at every IPMS National he entered. His planes were actually built like the real thing. He started by making the frames, then skinned them out. His work is in The Smithsonian Institute, and two U.S. presidents own one of his models.

Here he is with President George H.W. Bush in the Oval office. they were both pilots in WW II.



Here is a photo gallery of some of his work. As I remember, all his planes were large scale, either 1/32 or 1/24th. A true loss to the model aircraft community!

http://www.google.com/search?q=arlo+schroeder+model+aircraft&client=safari&rls=en&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=NHEHU7KWNuaj2QXoiYD4CA&ved=0CDQQsAQ&biw=1810&bih=1045
 
Way back in 1982, at the IPMS National convention, an aircraft modeler named Mark Waki entered what I still consider the most amazing model aircraft I have ever seen. You have to consider that was 32 years ago, no photo-etch, no update sets, no accessories. Even the quality of the kits were nothing compared to today. Hands down, he won Best of Show easily. These photos do not do this plane justice., even all the hinges work. Absolutely amazing.

http://www.markwaki.com/pages/Focke%20Wulf%20190%20D9%20page1.htm

Bob

He mentions vacuum-formed or stretch-formed..Vacuum Formed I've heard of. what is stretched formed?
 
Way back in 1982, at the IPMS National convention, an aircraft modeler named Mark Waki entered what I still consider the most amazing model aircraft I have ever seen. You have to consider that was 32 years ago, no photo-etch, no update sets, no accessories. Even the quality of the kits were nothing compared to today. Hands down, he won Best of Show easily. These photos do not do this plane justice., even all the hinges work. Absolutely amazing.

http://www.markwaki.com/pages/Focke%20Wulf%20190%20D9%20page1.htm

Bob

He mentions vacuum-formed or stretch-formed..Vacuum Formed I've heard of. what is stretched formed?

Sorry, I never heard of that either.
 
Isnt that like smash molding. You heat the plastic and then pull it down over the master. Not good for intricate shapes. Vac forming sucks it all into the shapes.
James
 
Wow, oh wow! Oh man, I'm not even worthy of standing in the same room here. I knew I was a novice modeler but I didn't know how rudimentary I am until now. Time for me to quit! I'll never be able to reach that level of ability.

I can say I have had the honor of meeting Arlo at one of the Nationals. He was a quiet unassuming man who was very humble and yet extremely helpful and informative, not to mention encouraging. he was a truly great man.
 
Well, that's pretty impressive!

It always amazes me the determination, skill and ingenuity some people put into their projects!
 
Back
Top