Fuerza Aerea Mexicana, Escuadron 201 “Aguilas Astecas”, P-47D s/n 1016, 1945
Here in the USA when we order an entrée at a Mexican restaurant, we are typically asked, “would you like rice or beans with that?” On a play of that phrase, our challenge was to build a subject representing either Japan or Mexico. Kudos for anyone who could do a subject that represented both, or finish two and represent both that way.
The Subject
Mexico entered World War II after German u-boats sank two Mexican Tankers in May 1942. In 1944 President Roosevelt offered President Comacho of Mexico the opportunity to fight alongside the US in the Pacific theater. That Spring, Mexico created the 201st Squadron and it was equipped with the P-47D. The Model
Since this was to be a fun build I didn’t want to tackle a natural metal finish on one of my Revell or Tamiya kits. I also have a Hasegawa P-47D as well as the Academy. I did a bit of research (okay, I tried to make sense from my two Squadron In-Action books, my decals and the web) of the variations of the P-47D. I believe, but am not certain, the Hobby Boss P-47D bubble top kit to represent a P-47D-25, and to be a copy of the Tamiya kit.I have no idea of the accuracy of the Hobby Boss kit. It is only my third P-47D model actually built, ever. (Okay, I remember a Lindberg P-47C I made in the ’70’s, but it’s a distant memory.) The first two are Hasegawa kits I made back in the late ’80’s. It looks appropriate sitting next to them, actually a bit heftier and to my very untrained Thunderbolt eye, the Hobby Boss looks better. Probably because I believe it to be based on the Tamiya kit.
I set it aside for a few weeks and made a final attempt. Again not quite right but I decided to finish anyway. I painted the maroon on using Tamiya XF-9 Hull Red and then masked it off. I then painted the anti-glare panel Model Master Acryl 4728 Olive Drab and masked that off.
Weathering — I’m nearly ready to swear off attempting to weather. I tried a wash of black water color to accent the panel lines but it just looked dirty. No matter how much I tried it looked wrong…so I wiped off as much as could. It appears some of the wash got through the Future to the decals below. Oh well, maybe on the next kit I’ll try oils instead of watercolors.
Overall it was a fun build and a good diversion from my usual Spitfires, Hurricanes and other European Theater subjects. The decal sheet offers 4 other Mexican subjects, plus 2 Columbian, 2 Venezuelan, 3 Cuban and 1 Chilean. All are colorful and rather unique so I’ll probably do another Latin Jug at some point.
Will I build another Hobby Boss P-47? The Hobby Boss looks better than my Hasegawa Thunderbolts I completed over 20 years ago; while my skills are better now, the shape of the Hasegawa looks “off” in comparison. But I have to say, while the prop on the Hobby Boss is obviously better, it’s cowl looks anemic. I will wait to do another Hobby Boss until after I build a Tamiya, Academy and Revell P-47 as a reference. If those others are better I’ll complete my shelf of Thunderbolts with those; if the Hobby Boss stands up I may get another; price-wise it’s about the same as Academy and Revell, and much less expensive than Tamiya.



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