aleatorylamp
Charter Member
Hello Ivan,
My memory plays tricks on me, it can´t have been 1/32 - that would make it a 2 ft. wingspan for the model, which is impossible. The Ju-88 must have been 1/48 scale, because that would be 16 inches, quite big, but not huge, which is more in accordance with my visual memory of it.
Talking of big models, my brother built a B-70 Valkyrie, which was over 2.5 ft long - that was huge for a 1/72 scale!
The Ju-88 had no messy edges, and a distincly clean and shiny finish, so it may have been Monogram after all. Revell had more advertising in comics at the time (early 60´s?), so that may be why that name rings more.
I also remember how easy I kept the Ju-88´s prop-axels free of cement so the props would turn blowing at them. The 1/72 models gave greater problems there, and you needed a pin to apply the cement.
Anyway, since the advent of computers, I never built any more physical models...
Cheers,
Aleatorylamp
My memory plays tricks on me, it can´t have been 1/32 - that would make it a 2 ft. wingspan for the model, which is impossible. The Ju-88 must have been 1/48 scale, because that would be 16 inches, quite big, but not huge, which is more in accordance with my visual memory of it.
Talking of big models, my brother built a B-70 Valkyrie, which was over 2.5 ft long - that was huge for a 1/72 scale!
The Ju-88 had no messy edges, and a distincly clean and shiny finish, so it may have been Monogram after all. Revell had more advertising in comics at the time (early 60´s?), so that may be why that name rings more.
I also remember how easy I kept the Ju-88´s prop-axels free of cement so the props would turn blowing at them. The 1/72 models gave greater problems there, and you needed a pin to apply the cement.
Anyway, since the advent of computers, I never built any more physical models...
Cheers,
Aleatorylamp