Boeing B.24 D
Academy
1/7
2ème
Maquette, photos et texte de
Gabriele Luciani,
membre de l'IPMS Italy

A few of history...
During second world war,
many enemy warcrafts
was captured by Regia Aeronautica, the
Italian air force: the same warcrafts
was generally used for evaluation, always
previous to be repainted with italian national markings, usually over
the original camouflage. The biggest prey was the Consolidated B-24 D
1-CO “Liberator” s/n 41-23659, nicknamed “Blonde Bomber II”,
originally based at Bengasi
airfield (Libia).
This B.24 was
used by the “Pyramiders”
squadron, the 98th
Bomb Group, (formed by mixed anglo-american
crews ) of 47th
Bomb Wing, a formation of 15th Air Force; the 20/02/1943 after a
bombing mission again Napoli, “Blonde Bomber II”
landed at Pachino, a
small airfiled near Siracusa, in Sicilia :
his pilot, the Lt. Dan Story, as soon as the sun was
setting, deviated from the just course and, thinking to be on Malta,
looked switch the boundary’s light of airfield, while was
shooting some signal coloured
rockets. Story thinked
also to see the same rockets shooted according the password
used by allies during the same day ! After the war,
this pilot referred that his warcraft
was hit at one engines by italian anti aircraft guns during the bombing
mission over Naples and so, he have resolved to go to Malta, but from
the pictures does immediately after the landing of same warcraft at Pachino, the engines do not
present any traces of damage and the propellers do not appear to be feathred...
The landing was not all happy because
the Blonde Bomber II
come out from runway, felled into the mud... Immediately, italian
soldiers surrounded the
“Liberator” and one only volley of machine gun
persuaded the crew to rush down from the warcraft,
leaving it intact. In the following days, this B.24 was pulled out from
the mud, and repainted with the national italian insignia over the previos USAAF/RAF insignia : the
nickname on the right side and the pin-up girl painted on the port side of the front of fuselage
remained unchanged as the camouflage, in “desert
pink” and neutral gray.
After some attempts of
pilot of Comando Aeronautica Sicilia,
the 24/02/1943 arrived at Pachino
some members of Centro sperimentale
(Test centre) of Regia Aeronautica of Guidonia (near Rome). Few days were necessary for
these brave men to understand the piloting of the B.24, and on
04/03/1943, Captain Giovanni Raina,
using the rests of american
fuel into the tanks of warplane, flew Blonde Bomber II at
Fontanarossa airfield,
near Catania : the
italian gasoline was too stronger for the allied tanks (at least the
italian gasoline may consumed them) and in Fontanarossa
airfield there was germany
gasoline. From here, on 06/03/1943, always Cap. Raina landed to Guidonia :
during the months of march, april and may of 1943, the B.24 was used
intensively by the Centro Sperimentale
for a number series of test and the first days of june was transferred to Foligno airfield, near Perugia.
On 19/06/1943, on demand of Luftwaffe, Blonde Bomber II
was transferred in Germany at Rechlin
test centre for same evaluations : after some days, a german ferry crew , with
awareness, leaded the B.24 to end on a special runway appointed to
testing undercarriages...for rupture of the same undercarriages !!! The
fragile front undercarriage of B.24 broke and Blonde Bomber II so
remained in german
hands...
Modelling the Blonde Bomber II
Until the early 1990s, the only way to reproduce a B.24 D in 1/72 scale was the use of old Revell
kit : luckily, from 1992, there is a very good kit from the Academy-Minicraft, really the best on
the market. That firm produce a series of models of B.24 D, with
different decals : one
of this, the cat. Number 2135 (named “Nose art B-24D") is
just devoted to the Blonder
Bomber II, before the use by Regia Aeronautica !
This kit capture fairly good the aircraft lines and the details
are very acceptable : the panel of fuselage and of the wings are all
engraved in a good thin way. The best (but also the simple) manner to
release the kit is to close the bomb bay doors and the two windows of
the guns in fuselage: Academy give some pieces fot the interiors but these are
only a good base for go into details.. However when the Blonde Bomber was
used by italians, it was never used for bombing missions and so, is it
right to eliminate the bombs and the arm-racks, to utilise the
bulkheads and the floors, also to give more solidity to the model.
The cockpit, the forward layer position and the rear turret are
sufficient : the thick sash of the windows leaves no many things to see
at the interiors... Only the guns are bad and if possible it's better
to replace them with an after-market details set. During the assembling
it is necessary to pay attention to the connection between the central
fuselage and the
forward part of fuselage : Academy produce also the kit of B.24 J, and
not only the wings are common to both the models, but also the three
quarters of the fuselage. If you make right the things, it is not
necessary to use the putty and you can avoid to erase some of the
beautiful injection panels. Blonde
Bomber II have not the forward landing gear panels; there
was only two forward 12,7 mm guns (one on the left and one central) and
the two big pitot.
Unfortunately, the
transparent pieces (for the cockpit and forward layer position) are
almost big for the pertinent quarters. Before to close the main
fuselage, please remember to add an ballast if you want that your model
of B.24 will not to sit on his tail !!! Joking
aside, the instruction set of the kits (at least with a clear style) do
not remember this important particular...No problem for the wings
assembly and the connection
between wings and fuselage is very good and strong .
Camouflage and markings
As
others Liberator of 98th
and 376th
Bomber Group, the Blonde
Bomber II leave the factory with the top surfaces in Sand
49 (F.S. 30279-) and under surface in neutral grey 43 (F.S.
36173-Humbrol 156) but after the operational use, the sand 49 was easy
ruined by the hot Sun of African desert. That colour undergoes change
into the quaint “Desert
Pink” (F.S.
30213) : for my model I used an
old but precise paint of Gloy
firm, the A 333 (ANA 616), but an another paint will be now the Humbrol
250 or Xtracolor X-32.
The others details of this B.24 are in the same colour of the
U.S.A.A.F. warcrafts :
interior in F.S. 34151, structures of landing gear in silver, propeller
and edges of wings and tails in black. The nickname and the pin up are
in the decals of
Academy: these are the only subjects, with the internal tail fin, that you can use from that decals set if you want to
release the model with italian markings. For
these latter you must use for the wings four roundels with the tree
“fasci”
on white background (use the four roundels of Italeri 1/72 kit of
Caproni Ca 313/314; however the roundels have 18 mm of diameter); on
the fuselage you must paint the typical white band of italian warcrafts, used always from 1941
(in 1/72 scale is large
about 27 mm; there was behind wings between the first window and the
machine-gunner slot; also on the tails you must paint the (also this
typical italian) white cross:
large about 5 mm (always in 1/72 scale)
and overpaint part of
serial number.
Conclusions
Building Blonde Bomber
II from Academy kit you can make a funny modelling but you
can also take two birds with one broad pen : you can release one
particular B.24 D and also a four-engined
bomber of the Regia Aeronautica, the only one until the new P.108 of
Special Hobby....