Howdy, all…
I’ve been reading a lot of back issues of modeling magazines lately—way, way back issues, from the early 1980’s. I was reading FineScale Modeler, to be precise (and if you are a fan of the magazine and haven’t yet bought their 25 years, 1982-2007 and 10 years, 2008-2018 DVD’s, what are you waiting for?), especially the early issues between the initial Test Issue in 1982 until around 1987 just to look back and remember how it used to be. Incidentally, a lot of tools and products that modelers today seem to think are “new” actually date back to pre-FSM days. (I’ll cover the early days of FSM in a later post—I’ve been trying to write it for several weeks now, but always find something lacking.)
When the magazine first came out, I was a 1/48 scale WWII airplane modeler. If it did not fit that collection, I wasn’t interested. A few years later, my tastes changed—well, they didn’t change, per se, I just grew my areas of interest. In the Fall of 1986, I embarked on a 1/48th F-111 using the Monogram rework of the Aurora F-111A kit. I had recently discovered the Detail and Scale series, too, and after reading the reviews, looking at the photos, and comparing them to the actual plastic, I saw nothing but a major fight with the kit. I was at a crossroads. While at one of the Daytona hobby shops (most likely Sky, Ltd.—HobbyCraft Junction had closed, and Ace RC had only a small selection), I spied the Monogram 1/72 F-105G. Having been a fan of the Thud since I saw a picture in the family’s Collier’s Encyclopedia (again, this was when most families actually owned an encyclopedia set), and having built the Monogram 1/48th scale kit in 1983, I was intrigued. I bought the kit, and quickly liked the idea of jets in 1/72 scale. (I gave the ‘Vark to a college friend, who finished it respectably, showing that it *could* be done—and if you wanted a 1/48th scale F-111, this was the only way at the time.)
I reasoned that a 1/48th F-105 is almost the same length as a 1/48th B-25, and I realized that doing jets in the smaller scale did two things: saved display space—well, it didn’t really “save” space, since there were now more kits to build, the smaller kits just allowed for more models to be shown in the same space—and opened up a vast variety of subjects to my collection.
Sticking with the 1/72 scale theme, I would buy and build the Monogram EF-111A in the Spring of 1987, a Hasegawa F9F-2 Panther in the Fall of 1987, and a Monogram F-4D in the Spring of 1988, rounding out my years at “The Harvard of the Sky”. Later, after I graduated and joined the real world, I would build Fujimi’s AH-1J, and ESCI’s F-104C and Mirage F.1. As I started building for other people, I would build several copies of the Heller C-118, Hasegawa’s F-14, S-3, and F-16A+; Monogram’s F-4J and F-105G; and Revell’s F-89D. My journey to the “Dark Side” was complete—almost. I still build WWII fighters in 1/48th scale.
At about the same time, I also started to shrink my WWII bombers to 1/72 scale, and for the same reasons. I would find the Italeri B-25’s, Airfix A-26 and B-26, Revell’s A-20, B-24, and PBY, and Hasegawa’s B-17’s while I was in college…
Of course, I had also begun dabbling in ships, cars, armor, and miniatures (“figures”) by then, too…
(I once had a fairly convoluted collection breakdown. As I’ve progessed in years, I have started to re-think a lot of things, and am slowly going through a “fleet rationalization”. But that’s another story for another time…)
Anyway, I need to steer us back on track…
In the early to mid-1980’s, Fujimi and Hasegawa were leading the pack in 1/72 scale with a new generation of kits. Sure, the Italian firms of ESCI and Italeri had a few new goodies, and the Koreans were ramping up some kits of their own, but the folks from Shizuoka were standing head and shoulders above everyone else, including U.S. domestic stalwarts Revell and Monogram.
Fujimi, in particular, began releasing “families” of kits based on a common tool with inserts and optional parts to get as much mileage (read: as many variants of the type) from a mold as possible. Among this new series of 1/72nd scale kit families, we had:
- A-4 Skyhawk (from the A4D-1 on, including the TA-4’s and some of the export versions)
- A-6 Intruder (including the KA-6D)
- A-7 Corsair II (all single-seat variants from A-7A to A-7E)
- F-4 Phantom II (eventually the F-4B through the F-4S, including the RF-4B and C and the Spey-powered British Phantoms)
- F-86 Sabre (the F-86F family, including the F-40 and RF-86)
- F7U “Cutlass”
- Ju-87 Stuka (D, G, and R variants)
- D3A “Val”
- B6N “Jill”
- D4Y “Judy”
- B7A “Grace”
- Ki-36 “Ida”
- Ki-15 “Babs”
- F1M “Pete”
- A5M “Claude”
- CH-46 Sea Knight
- H-60 Blackhawk
Later in the 1980’s and into the 1990’s, Fujimi continued with a 1/72 F-14A, F-16 series, MiG-21 series, and F/A-18 series that were on the same level as the contemporary releases of the same subjects from Hasegawa. In addition, they offered a 1/72nd scale Ki-43 Oscar series, the J1N1 “Irving”, some late marque Spitfires (they only managed to do the XIVc and FR.19, according to Scalemates), and also got into 1/144 scale with a series of B-29 kits. Later, they would add Japanese WWII fighters to the 1/144 collection, and after Nitto went bankrupt, they would add some of their military vehicles to the Fujimi catalog.
If you built modern subjects, when you add to these their earlier SH-3 Sea King, E-2 Hawkeye, Kaman Seaspite, Bell UH-1N, Westland Lynx, CH/HH-53, and AH-1J Sea/Sand Cobras, there was a lot to choose from. And, when you coupled Fujimi’s jets and helicopters to the Hasegawa kits of the day (F-14, F-15, F-16, S-2, S-3, etc.), you could amass quite a collection of modern airplanes.
The WWII guys had a lot to choose from, too, especially stuff that had either not been made before as an injection molded kit, or the only kits available were older, less accurate and less detailed kits, some of which were in odd scales.
Now, I had already purchased and perused (and stashed) the older Fujimi 1/48th scale Bf-110C/D, late Bf-109G/K, the Aichi D3A “Val”, the 1/50th Fw-190D-9; and had actually built their 1/50th Spitfire Vb in 1983. The fact that some of their kits were in “odd” scales (1/50 and 1/70) for their earlier kits didn’t really bother me at the time, and by the time I was getting into the smaller scale, the kits that interested me were in the more common scales. Even the older kits were nicely done from a molding quality standpoint, only the accuracy and detailing needed better execution. Still, most were the only games in town at the time—for example, the Dora was “it” in anything near 1/48th scale unless you converted the Monogram kit with Bill Koster’s excellent vac-form conversion. We had to wait until 1987 for Trimaster to put a state-of-the-art injection molded 1/48th scale Fw-190D-9 kit on the shelves.
Even in 1/48th scale, they had a few older kits of modern subjects, including an F-14A, an F-15, the Mitsubishi F-1 and T-2, and a 1/50th F-5B that also masqueraded as a “White Mosquito” T-38.
But these new tool kits in 1/72 scale were something else. Petite recessed detail, good fit, fairly decent details, and they were not astronomically priced. I believe Testors had the U.S. market distributorship agreement back then, which kept the pricing fairly low. Some of these would also appear in Testors boxes along the way.
And then, they were gone. It seemed as though Fujimi kits on hobby shop shelves had evaporated overnight. When you could find them, the prices had soared. What happened?
Apparently--and I’m going by what I know about the plastic model industry from my days working at hobby shops here, since most Japanese model manufacturers keep a close lid on their internal goings-on--is that when Testors’ importer agreement with Fujimi ended, for whatever reason, no other importer picked them up OR Fujimi decided not to replace Testors as their importer into the U.S. Or, perhaps things weren’t as rosy as we had hoped—after all, with all these superb kits coming out, it was a virtual license to print money, right? We couldn’t keep their kits on the shelves for a while. Did the Testors re-boxings divert money? Were they not hot sellers elsewhere in the world? And it wasn’t as if all Fujimi had going for them were these airplane kits—they made cars in 1/24 (Porsches, the Ford GT-40 series, racing Ferraris), waterline series ships in 1/700 scale, military vehicles in 1/72 and 1/76, and recently, they produced some 1/350 scale ship kits, too.
Whatever happened, Fujimi is still around. Their website shows 232 airplane kits in the aircraft line—most of which are marked as “sold out”. Recently, they offered kits of the F-22A and the F-35B (VTOL version). As you run through the line, you’ll see just how extensive the Fujimi catalog is. The fact that there is no U.S. importer means that instead of going to the local shop, you need to go online. Hobbylink Japan, Hobbylinc, PlazaJapan, and HobbySearch all carry the line.
If you’ve never had the pleasure, get a modern (post-1982) Fujimi kit and build it. I’m sure you’ll enjoy the ride. As I promised last time, I’ll document the construction of one of Fujimi’s Sea Kings in the next post. The Fujimi Sea King kit pre-dates the others by a few years (it appeared in 1980), but it was marketed as a “family”, including the SH-3D/G/H, JSDF HSS-2B, and RAF Sea King HAR.3). It was a good indication of what was to come from Fujimi Mokei.
* * * * * * * * * *
Here in the Greater Upper Midlands Co-Prosperity Sphere, things are going as well as can be expected. Both model clubs (AMPS and IPMS) have gone to Zoom meetings, since both clubs normally meet in county libraries that have been closed since March. Zoom meetings work fairly well for those who join them, but some of the folks just don’t have the technical know-how and equipment to participate. Several people have offered alternative meeting locations, but they aren’t big enough to practice social distancing, so we’ll stick with Zoom for now. It isn’t a perfect solution, but it works well enough.
Of the model show “casualties” of COVID-19, our June show had been postponed until August, but last week the committee decided to cancel it. There were many reasons, all of them valid, but the cherry on the sundae was the Governor’s Executive Order than limited the number of people allowed in any government facility to no more than 50. Since that would barely accommodate the show staff and vendors, we were left with no other choice.
Of course, IPMS/USA cancelled their 2020 National Convention in San Marcos, Texas as the number of confirmed cases of COVID-19 spiked in that state. The San Marcos crew was awarded the 2023 convention after IPMS/USA renegotiated the deal with the venue there. It was the right thing to do, especially when it has come to light that a convention hall close to the venue has been opened as an overflow hospital.
The only show that is still “Go!” (for now, at least) is the rescheduled (from May) and moved (from Harrisburg, PA to Danbury, CT) AMPS International Convention, although given the traveler quarantines in place in the Northeast, I expect it to be cancelled in the upcoming weeks.
* * * * * * *
Speaking of AMPS, our Chapter’s long-term project for the South Carolina Confederate Relic Room and Military Museum was moved into place and completed in March. The museum has an announcement, and the Facebook page we established has now been opened to the public.
We kept things under wraps during construction, but since it is now on full display, here’s a thumbnail:
The 8’X12’X5’ diorama represents Fire Support Base RIPCORD circa mid- to late June, 1970. RIPCORD was a pivotal battle during Operation TEXAS STAR, yet another attempt to shut down the movement of men and material down the Ho Chi Minh Trail. It was for all intents and purposes under siege from 1 July 1970 until it was “closed” and evacuated on 23 July. It was the last battle led and fought primarily by U.S. troops.
If you want to know more, check out the RIPCORD Association website.
We built the diorama in 1/72 scale, with a good 95% of it being bespoke—only a relative few items (helicopters, howitzers) were built from kits. It is located in the atrium between the South Carolina State Museum’s ticket desk and the Relic Room; to view it costs nothing. It is supposed to remain in place for at least two years. If you are an AMPS national member, Part One of a three-part article appeared in the latest issue of the AMPS magazine “Boresight”.
* * * * * * *
That’s all I have for now. Thanks for reading. Stay safe and stay well, and, as always, be good to one another. I bid you Peace.
Comments