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Here are some accessories you might find useful for this kit
Quetzales Vie Jos Guerreros, Guatemala Air Force 1921-1945 (10) Avro 504K 1921; Ryan PT-20 1939; Fairchild PT-19A Cornell 1946; Stearman PT-17 Kaydet 1943; North-American T6-D/G Texan 1943; Boeing P-26A Peashooter 1943; Beechcraft AT-11 Kansan 1946; Beechcraft C-45 Expeditor 1952; Nort American P-51D/P-51K Mustang 1954; Douglas DC-3 Dakota Skytrain 1945. Includes Numbers, National Insignia, Badges etc for several examples of each type.
Douglas R4D-8/C-117D Super Gooney by Steve Ginter with Norm Tayler & Amgelo Romano. 15-color and over 300 b&w photos and text cover its usage as a transport, VIP carrier, station hack, a trainer with VT-29, and its usage in Antarctica with VX-6 from 1952 into the 1980s. The DC-3S was a Douglas venture to add capability and life to the post war fleet of surplus DC-3s, C-47s and R4Ds. It was an remanufactured aircraft with a stretched fuselage, new taller and wider tail group, new square tip outer wings, larger engines and fully enclosed main gear housings. It did not find favor with the airlines which instead turned to Convairs and Martins, but found a home in the Navy and Marines. 96 aircraft were eventually re-manufactured as R4D-8s and 4 as R4D-8Zs.
136 pages, 15-color and over 300 B&W photos of history and drawings.
RNZAF Douglas C-47 / DC-3 Dakotas - "Kiwi" roundels, three options.
Recommended kit, Monogram
- NZ3547, No.42 Squadron. Parachute training configuration, 1977
- NZ3551, No.42 Squadron. VIP configuration mid 1970's
- NZ3553, No.42 Squadron. VIP configuration 1978.
Colour schemes. Gloss white above the fuselage window line and on vertical tail surfaces as shown on the profile. Propeller blades are black with white-red-white tips. Propeller domes are blue to match the fuselage stripes. Undercarriage legs are light grey. Anti-glare panel forward of cockpit is matte black.
NZ3547. Aluminium cellulose paint on wing surfaces and on the fuselage below the window line.
NZ3551 and NZ3553. Polished bare metal except for gloss light grey FS 16440 parts of the underbelly, under wings and nacelles.
Douglas C-47 Skytrain/Dakota By Adrian M. Balch
When the prototype Douglas DC-3 " actually a DST Douglas Sleeper Transport first flew from Clover Field, Santa Monica, California on Sunday 17 December 1935, Donald Wills Douglas never imagined that the production run would total more than 10,000, with more licence built in Russia and Japan, let alone many would be still be flying 86 years later, the C-47 being perpetuated by turbo-prop conversions, seeing the type probably still flying to see its 100th anniversary! Arguably the most famous transport aircraft of all time, the DC-3 and C-47 has been operated by just about every country in the world in service with their airlines and military air arms. This Warpaint has not skimped on the colour schemes and markings used by military operators, the C-47 being named by the USAAF as the Skytrain and the RAF and Commonwealth countries as the Dakota, both names being adopted worldwide. This lavish and extensive Warpaint by author Adrian Balch includes over 300 photographs of military C-47s, nearly all in colour, accompanied by 10 pages of colour profiles by artist Sam Pearson making this the most comprehensive reference to colours and markings for modellers and historians on the type to date.