arun 0 Posted April 5, 2013 Share Posted April 5, 2013 Hi chaps - I've asked this elsewhere, but there's nowhere like "home". Any recommendations for Spitfire kits? Am looking for plan build or kit. Worth noting the aim of this is a long term build project to a high standard, so not scared how hard the kit is, if I have to stop and learn other skills along the way I will Haven't decided on a size yet, but probably would like to run a petrol engine in it. I've looked at the following so far TopFlite, Ziroli, Warbird Replicas, Mick Reeves, DB Sport & Scale, Nijhuis, Brian Taylor. Is there anything I've missed? Anyone know what kit/plan Roger's spit is? Link to post Share on other sites
Club Members Trevor 25 Posted April 6, 2013 Club Members Share Posted April 6, 2013 I believe rogers current spit is a Kyosho 90 size artf. The Brian Taylor is a classic kit but quite big for the Fickleshole field. There is also a Dennis Bryant plan on Traplet which is about 63in span Sent from my MB525 using Tapatalk 2 Link to post Share on other sites
arun 0 Posted April 7, 2013 Author Share Posted April 7, 2013 Thanks Trevor, wasn't aware of the Dennis Bryant one - any idea of its flying credentials? Doubt this one will be for Fickleshole so I'm not too worried about size during the selection process... Link to post Share on other sites
Peter 0 Posted April 7, 2013 Share Posted April 7, 2013 I think the Dennis Bryant is a Spitfire mk24so has the bubble canopy and a longer nose. The D B sport and scale has a goodflying pedigree and is suitable for petrol Peter Link to post Share on other sites
Club Members Trevor 25 Posted April 8, 2013 Club Members Share Posted April 8, 2013 As Peter says, the Dennis Bryant one is a Mk22 and too small for petrol. If size is no object and you enjoy building then the DB Sport one is the one I personally would go for. The Mick Reeves 1/4 scale is big and needs 60-100cc petrol, probably too big. His 1/6 scale one is probably a bit too small for petrol. The next choice would be the Brian Taylor 83" span. The Kyosho artf 90 size is a good plane and flies well but probably a bit small for petrol. Link to post Share on other sites
arun 0 Posted April 8, 2013 Author Share Posted April 8, 2013 Love building, but I'll have to chip away at it slowly due to other commitments an probably less ambitious builds along the way. Inception to airworthiness likely to be measured in years but my lifetime objective for the hobby has always been a 1/4 scale model of a Spitfire ... so I need to get practicing to make that a reality many years from now Link to post Share on other sites
YellowAlert 0 Posted April 10, 2013 Share Posted April 10, 2013 I was talking to a warbird expert about this kindof subject recently.. He always said smaller Spritfires aren't so good, best start with 1/6th scale (around 72" span). The Kyosho and Dennis Bryant models are no doubt good but 1/6th scale+ models have far more 'presence' in the air anyway. Adding another mere 10-15 inches to the windspan adds an amazing amount more to presence too, but this is apparently where a lot of warbird newbies go wrong - an 88" warbird can weigh twice that of a 72" model and demands far more from the pilot.. I can tell you flying a 72" warbird is a big enough step up from .60-size models - just don't ask how the Wycombe MFC BBQ got bent last year! Consequently I think the smart thing to do is start with a 72" ARTF - which is why I'm building a YT FW-190 right now (build thread to come). Even though it's "only" an ARTF there is plenty more complexity to make the build lengthy and interesting. The idea is to learn the typical warbird mistakes on an ARTF I'm not emotionally attached too. Then perhaps after many (50+) incident-free flights I'll put the time and effort into building a 'proper' 1/5+ scale model (plenty of good choices in the OP). One thing I will say however is please, please don't put a 2-stroke petrol in it - one way to ruin a nice scale model is to make it sound like a cheap lawnmower! I don't know what the larger 4-stroke petrols sound like (all I know is they're expensive!), but you can't beat a 4-stroke glow in the 20-25cc range.. Sam Link to post Share on other sites
YellowAlert 0 Posted April 10, 2013 Share Posted April 10, 2013 In answer to my own question (4-st petrol sound), this doesn't sound too bad: Still not as nice as glow 4-st mind.. Link to post Share on other sites
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