Got this as a bundle of 2 dozen kits from a shop that was going out of business....have an entire squadron of WW1 planes from various combatants.....eventually I'll get them all done.😀
This was my first plastic model! 12 years ago at my scouts rememberance day ceremony, we watched the Battle of Britain and all made this exact kit! Nowhere near as well as you I’d obviously!🤣 Good times
Hi Matt. I enjoyed watching your show detailing the history of this Camel build. A while back I purchased a vintage Revell 1:72 Camel --it was the 1966 release featuring Roy Brown's Sopwith Camel. The only significant difference was a much sparser decal set; they were not nearly as extensive or colorful as the decals that came with your kit. Applying 55 year old decals was also a real challenge. I was lucky that the decals didn't disintegrate. But I wish I had used some aftermarket decals from say Print Scale to jazz up the plane just a bit. I didn't have any issues with a major seam line along the fuselage. I also hand painted my model as this was a road build and I didn't have an airbrush handy. It came out okay although the hand painted white elevators were and are a bit.. well iffy. I added 1:72 scale rigging wire from SB Models; I find this quite easy to use and much more to liking for the small scale warbirds than elastic line or thread. I'd send you a link to my photo gallery but I think UA-cam doesn't allow URL links in the comments and that would result in my comment being deleted by the algorithm. You did a nice job on this vintage build. To date, I've built 5 of these Revell 1:72 warbirds and while the kits have their issues, I think they are far superior kits to the Roden 1:72 warbirds that came along at least 25 years later. Cheers.
@@ModelMinutes I rember the matchbox "Aerobatic teams" gift set which had four kits in it.. The hawk and Gnat from the red Arrows, the alpha jet from the patrouille de France and the saab tunnan from some long forgotten Swedish air force team.... Strange that they included the tunnan as they had a blue angles grumman tiger, a Thunderbirds F-16 and a blue diamonds hawker hunter in their range at the time which I feel any of these 3 kits would have been a better choice than the tunnan.
Great video, Matt. Good to see you got the Camel over the finish line. I've got an older boxing of this kit kicking around in my stash some place. Makes me want to dig it out and have at it!
I'm looking forward to this, seeing how you deal with biplanes of this scale which is NOT easy... I did the Airfix Fokker Dr.I and the Roland D.II and they were a pain but when in one piece they're really strong.
@@ModelMinutes turned out well in the end... And don't worry about it not having rigging wires as it looks perfectly fine without them.. Only grumpy grey beards will moan about it. Lol.
Smashing job. Got this in the stash. Love biplanes, so much more appealing subjects. Usually make a hash of fitting the struts but the pain is worth it. Helpful tip about weighting the wings. Never bother with rigging. Keep up the good work Matt, chocks away!
Thanksfor using my video clips Matt - I think if I ever go near this plane as a build it will be 1:48 or bigger! Good vid, good build, and now back to my Wellington Mk. II
Must 55 years ago I was making Aifix Dogfight Doubles pack that included the Camel. Kits were crude back then and we couldn't afford more than one paintbrush and a few paints (we all kept those Humbrol pots in old cigar boxes which didn't quite shut properly due to pots fractionally too high to fit in the boxes). I got pretty good at it - just about as good as a lot of these videos. Hung from bedroom ceiling, they all crashed when brother and I had a pillow fight. Just listened to end and heard this used 1963 tooling - my generation. Revell was far better than Airfix but couldn't afford it. We didn't get all those transfers!
That seam line could have been fixed by 'filling' the lower side and sanding it to shape. Upper wing's trailing edge still has a significant amount of flash. Looking back at the wheel hubs you don't seem to enjoy thoroughly cleaning parts. There are several visible pin marks, which could have been sanded down easily. Between fuselage and lower wing is a significant gap. Glue accidents in several places. The roundels didn't conform well to the wing/aileron gap. Clearly the decals are pretty thick and could have used more setting solution. The brown paint around the cockpit shows cracks, which I have never seen happen before. Took 2 years to finish, but 1 or 2 more hours 'polishing' the model wasn't in the cards.
@@ModelMinutes More power to you! But if you put "it took 2 years to finish" in the title and it looks like a 12 year old did it during a weekend you have live with criticism. If you can't deal with criticism, don't put your 'work' online. It's that simple.
@@fonesrphunny7242 nasty piece of work aren't you. He started it as almost a beginner, forgot about it for 2 years and finished it off as if hadn't got the extra experience - he said all that in the video
@@cuebj The title clearly says "took 2 years to build", which implies some work went into it and the result is of decent quality. Also, 20 minutes long? Sounds like a pretty awesome project and I'd love to see it!!! But then it turns out, the kit has just been collecting dust for 2 years and was finished poorly over one weekend. See the difference? That's borderline click-bait and I'm simply not a fan of it.
For it to take two years, I would have thought this was where you had the balls to build and detail the older 1/28 scale Revell kit to put up against the Wingnut Wings "sacred cows".
@@ModelMinutes I have 3 camels and the Werner Voss triplane (3) and the Spads , also 3 each in the revell scale from the mid 60's , and the reason why is the first 3 of each were a disaster on my part , the second set of these models were lacking , quality , also on my part , and the 3rd set I was lucky to find , the triplane , camel and spad are still in the wrap , and shake my head in remorse how I screwed the kits up so bad , Im sure I will be long gone before there build.
Yeah, i do talk about not including rigging near the end, but basically I pretty much wanted this project at a position I could call it "done" so that i could move on to other things - i might come back to rigging at a future point
A very good Rescue Build Finish Indeed. I too find Rigging a pain. I am proud of my results in 1/72nd Scale. I can't help but think that rigging detail at this size can be excessive, especially for these tiny WWI Fighters. Using melted Sprue seems to be the way to go, but it takes such a long time. I have seen it done professionally with wire. It looks fine. However, the Professional Finish is for the Camera and I question how long is it before the rigged finishing touches fall by the wayside? Rigging doesn't seem worth it for a Display piece.
Airfix was horrible to get help on decals for the hurricane model I decided to add drops of white to the copit it was a run around to get help my email and comments disappear at there end so I gave up it was not in the kit when I bought it
I made an Revell 1:72 Fokker Dr VII some time ago, took me quite some time but it turned out pretty good I think. Anyways I think your camel looks amazing!
Don't feel bad about taking 2 years to make this kit . It's llike the old saying "all good things take time". Heck this reminds me that I started the Special Hobby 1/48 scale Morane-Saulnier AI in 2016......like your Camel it went back into its box.........and hasn't been seen since! Great looking model & great video too!
@@ModelMinutes I've got quite a few unfinshed kits in my stash. Plus I've got quite a few WW1 Aircraft kits which I've not started. So I might take out the Morane-Saulnier Al one of these days!
Thanks for the suggestion - I work months in advance though so my next video has already been made - I will try and get round to looking at that kit as soon as I can though
Good resurrection of a long forgotten shelf queen. A little more work on the pilot would have improved his appearance. A dark wash of his clothes. His goggles painted black. A red brown wash on the flesh areas. Yes, a segment on rigging would be informative, since most WW1 aircraft had rigging. Thanks. Bill
According to various online sources the Sistine Chapel painting was started in 1508 and completed in 1512. Additionally He had a number of assistants to aide him in his work…. I’m sure he would have been able to finish this model in a day or so though
@@ModelMinutes So it wasn’t loss of mojo the curse of the modern modeller? I appreciated the old school use of the toothpick. I used to use a pin. The one that I used to leave in the tube of glue to stop it setting.
If you would put so many layers of paint on the real plane it would be too heavy to take off…😅 Nice result though 👍 The Sopwith is one of my fav planes of WW I (although I feel kinda guilty to fav killing machines in general!)
@@ModelMinutes I am totally with you 😅 stripping is always a pain in the neck - and as not too many details are provided I would have done the same. I tried to get back into the 1/72 scale but realized my hands are too big by now…I did my last biplane in 1977 - a Fokker D. VI - my mom helped me painting it. She had experience because of painting her nails and stuff 😅. Thanks for the memories and cheers from Germany…😉
Got this as a bundle of 2 dozen kits from a shop that was going out of business....have an entire squadron of WW1 planes from various combatants.....eventually I'll get them all done.😀
Good luck!
I like the videos where he doesn’t use an airbrush. It shows how great the product can be just using simple materials.
Glad you like them!
This was my first plastic model!
12 years ago at my scouts rememberance day ceremony, we watched the Battle of Britain and all made this exact kit! Nowhere near as well as you I’d obviously!🤣
Good times
Sounds like a fun memory!
Stunning build mate! Whenever I see a sopwith camel it always reminds me of the biggles books, so thank you for rekindling them adventures.
Thank you! Cheers!
I don't remember reading about Biggles in a Camel, but then I suppose he flew a wider variety than most.
Hi Matt. I enjoyed watching your show detailing the history of this Camel build.
A while back I purchased a vintage Revell 1:72 Camel --it was the 1966 release featuring Roy Brown's Sopwith Camel. The only significant difference was a much sparser decal set; they were not nearly as extensive or colorful as the decals that came with your kit. Applying 55 year old decals was also a real challenge. I was lucky that the decals didn't disintegrate. But I wish I had used some aftermarket decals from say Print Scale to jazz up the plane just a bit. I didn't have any issues with a major seam line along the fuselage. I also hand painted my model as this was a road build and I didn't have an airbrush handy. It came out okay although the hand painted white elevators were and are a bit.. well iffy. I added 1:72 scale rigging wire from SB Models; I find this quite easy to use and much more to liking for the small scale warbirds than elastic line or thread.
I'd send you a link to my photo gallery but I think UA-cam doesn't allow URL links in the comments and that would result in my comment being deleted by the algorithm.
You did a nice job on this vintage build. To date, I've built 5 of these Revell 1:72 warbirds and while the kits have their issues, I think they are far superior kits to the Roden 1:72 warbirds that came along at least 25 years later. Cheers.
Sounds good! If you have a discord account you can always post images on my server (link in description) or alternative ly on my Facebook page
Very excited
:)
What a coincidence I just finished building the exact same kit
good work it looks amazing! Especially for hand painting
Thanks!
I remember building this one back in the 70's when it was sold as a 3 in 1 kit.
I do miss the "box sets" of kits, they don't seem so common now
@@ModelMinutes I rember the matchbox "Aerobatic teams" gift set which had four kits in it.. The hawk and Gnat from the red Arrows, the alpha jet from the patrouille de France and the saab tunnan from some long forgotten Swedish air force team.... Strange that they included the tunnan as they had a blue angles grumman tiger, a Thunderbirds F-16 and a blue diamonds hawker hunter in their range at the time which I feel any of these 3 kits would have been a better choice than the tunnan.
Great video, Matt. Good to see you got the Camel over the finish line. I've got an older boxing of this kit kicking around in my stash some place. Makes me want to dig it out and have at it!
You should have a go!
I'm looking forward to this, seeing how you deal with biplanes of this scale which is NOT easy... I did the Airfix Fokker Dr.I and the Roland D.II and they were a pain but when in one piece they're really strong.
:)
@@ModelMinutes turned out well in the end... And don't worry about it not having rigging wires as it looks perfectly fine without them.. Only grumpy grey beards will moan about it. Lol.
Smashing job. Got this in the stash. Love biplanes, so much more appealing subjects. Usually make a hash of fitting the struts but the pain is worth it. Helpful tip about weighting the wings. Never bother with rigging. Keep up the good work Matt, chocks away!
haha thanks! Yeah, putting some weight on those wings just helped them say in place
It is interesting to see how your skills have changed. I also love that you stuck to your brush painting roots!
Thank you so much!
great video Matt Thankyou! love the camel and you did a great job :)
Thanks so much!
Cracking build mate. Well done
Cheers bro :d
Thanksfor using my video clips Matt - I think if I ever go near this plane as a build it will be 1:48 or bigger! Good vid, good build, and now back to my Wellington Mk. II
Thanks for contributing! :D
Must 55 years ago I was making Aifix Dogfight Doubles pack that included the Camel. Kits were crude back then and we couldn't afford more than one paintbrush and a few paints (we all kept those Humbrol pots in old cigar boxes which didn't quite shut properly due to pots fractionally too high to fit in the boxes). I got pretty good at it - just about as good as a lot of these videos. Hung from bedroom ceiling, they all crashed when brother and I had a pillow fight.
Just listened to end and heard this used 1963 tooling - my generation. Revell was far better than Airfix but couldn't afford it. We didn't get all those transfers!
Thanks for sharing your story :)
Can’t wait for this video😁
:)
I enjoyed this video of this model plane. Nice plane. I had once a small and big model but it got donated away.
Sorry to hear that
Turned out looking pretty good.
Thanks!
Turned out well in the end
thanks!
This will exit the day before my birthday
:)
That seam line could have been fixed by 'filling' the lower side and sanding it to shape.
Upper wing's trailing edge still has a significant amount of flash. Looking back at the wheel hubs you don't seem to enjoy thoroughly cleaning parts.
There are several visible pin marks, which could have been sanded down easily.
Between fuselage and lower wing is a significant gap.
Glue accidents in several places.
The roundels didn't conform well to the wing/aileron gap. Clearly the decals are pretty thick and could have used more setting solution.
The brown paint around the cockpit shows cracks, which I have never seen happen before.
Took 2 years to finish, but 1 or 2 more hours 'polishing' the model wasn't in the cards.
I do what I want
@@ModelMinutes More power to you!
But if you put "it took 2 years to finish" in the title and it looks like a 12 year old did it during a weekend you have live with criticism. If you can't deal with criticism, don't put your 'work' online. It's that simple.
Fair point
@@fonesrphunny7242 nasty piece of work aren't you. He started it as almost a beginner, forgot about it for 2 years and finished it off as if hadn't got the extra experience - he said all that in the video
@@cuebj The title clearly says "took 2 years to build", which implies some work went into it and the result is of decent quality. Also, 20 minutes long? Sounds like a pretty awesome project and I'd love to see it!!!
But then it turns out, the kit has just been collecting dust for 2 years and was finished poorly over one weekend.
See the difference?
That's borderline click-bait and I'm simply not a fan of it.
Lovely build, Matt 😊👍
Thanks! 😀
Well done 👍🏼
thanks!
this was my second model kit i ever built
Brave to go straight into a bi-plane.!
@@stuartwren5526 Well it was a gift but I definitely wasn't ready
I hope you had fun :D
@@ModelMinutes I hope you did too :)
For it to take two years, I would have thought this was where you had the balls to build and detail the older 1/28 scale Revell kit to put up against the Wingnut Wings "sacred cows".
lol sadly not
@@ModelMinutes I have 3 camels and the Werner Voss triplane (3) and the Spads , also 3 each in the revell scale from the mid 60's , and the reason why is the first 3 of each were a disaster on my part , the second set of these models were lacking , quality , also on my part , and the 3rd set I was lucky to find , the triplane , camel and spad are still in the wrap , and shake my head in remorse how I screwed the kits up so bad , Im sure I will be long gone before there build.
Great looking Camel Matt😊👍🍻
Thanks 👍 :D
Great plane and great vid
Thanks so much!
Paint with a brush isn't easy, so your model is 👍. Glad you can finished it.
Thanks! Yeah, I just needed it “done” so that I could move on with my life
I built this model last year. Very nice kit. I like the historic info you include in your video. By the way - no rigging?
Yeah, i do talk about not including rigging near the end, but basically I pretty much wanted this project at a position I could call it "done" so that i could move on to other things - i might come back to rigging at a future point
At 2023 maybe D:
@@7979phantom yeah, I’m another 2 years away from that video 😂
A very good Rescue Build Finish Indeed. I too find Rigging a pain. I am proud of my results in 1/72nd Scale. I can't help but think that rigging detail at this size can be excessive, especially for these tiny WWI Fighters. Using melted Sprue seems to be the way to go, but it takes such a long time. I have seen it done professionally with wire. It looks fine. However, the Professional Finish is for the Camera and I question how long is it before the rigged finishing touches fall by the wayside? Rigging doesn't seem worth it for a Display piece.
i agree, rigging can be more trouble than it's worth sometimes
Real fun to look at your build
1/72 I am still amaze as well you succeed at building your kit never did have success with 1/72
Thanks! Yes, 1/72 can be tricky
Nice build! Colours are a lot more vibrant than the original colours. I would like to see a video on the rigging of this! Model on!
Thanks for the idea!
Something I would like to see is a model collection video.
good suggestion!
Remembering their other 1/25th scale one.
how was it?
Would be interested in your rigging technique. Take care and thanks for the video.
Cool, thanks
Airfix was horrible to get help on decals for the hurricane model I decided to add drops of white to the copit it was a run around to get help my email and comments disappear at there end so I gave up it was not in the kit when I bought it
that's a shame! They have been helpful and resolved issues when I've had to contact them
Nice video
Thanks
I made an Revell 1:72 Fokker Dr VII some time ago, took me quite some time but it turned out pretty good I think. Anyways I think your camel looks amazing!
I mean a Fokker DVII
thanks!
You got me beat :D , I thought my HMS Rodney taking 11 months was a long time
:P
My friends friend (weird saying) made a model after 20 years, took him 3 years!
Don't feel bad about taking 2 years to make this kit . It's llike the old saying "all good things take time". Heck this reminds me that I started the Special Hobby 1/48 scale Morane-Saulnier AI in 2016......like your Camel it went back into its box.........and hasn't been seen since! Great looking model & great video too!
Thanks! You should probably dig yours out at some point
@@ModelMinutes I've got quite a few unfinshed kits in my stash. Plus I've got quite a few WW1 Aircraft kits which I've not started. So I might take out the Morane-Saulnier Al one of these days!
can your next video be the airfix raf centinary set 1/72 please because i want to see that kit
Thanks for the suggestion - I work months in advance though so my next video has already been made - I will try and get round to looking at that kit as soon as I can though
@@ModelMinutes thanks did you know you are my favourite youtube channel
@@rasheedkorb9877 wow! I’m honoured 😊
Nice build. I actually may do another biplane.
You should! Thanks for watching!
As flown by the fictional character Biggles of the famous 226 Squadron in France from 1916 to 1918.
exactly!
Hey Matt, can u do a how to brush paint guide 😂
That's a great idea - what kind of stuff would you like to know? I might be able to make some kind of tutorial on it
Stuff like what kind of paints to use, how to nog leaving brushstrokes that kind of stuff. Maybe a guide how to paint with acrylic and enamels?
@@jasonmcdermott9891 I'll see what I can do :D
Good resurrection of a long forgotten shelf queen. A little more work on the pilot would have improved his appearance. A dark wash of his clothes. His goggles painted black. A red brown wash on the flesh areas.
Yes, a segment on rigging would be informative, since most WW1 aircraft had rigging. Thanks.
Bill
To be honest I completely forgot the pilot was already glued into the model 😂
Does that mean the video will be 2 years long?
I can’t even begin to imagine how long that would take to edit and upload
Great job man! I know how you feel, I'm in the process of painting a 1/100 m1 Abrams...driving me insane...🤪👍
lol, there are some kits that are like that, can never seem to get it "quite right"
Two years, that's nothing. I started to build an Airfix 1/24 Stuka 2005
And it is still not finished, 😁
nice!
It didn’t take Michelangelo as long to paint the Sistine Chapel.
According to various online sources the Sistine Chapel painting was started in 1508 and completed in 1512. Additionally He had a number of assistants to aide him in his work….
I’m sure he would have been able to finish this model in a day or so though
@@ModelMinutes Just out of interest why did you leave it?
@@iangascoigne8231 other things just got in the way
@@ModelMinutes So it wasn’t loss of mojo the curse of the modern modeller? I appreciated the old school use of the toothpick. I used to use a pin. The one that I used to leave in the tube of glue to stop it setting.
I tried making the revell 1:48 zoo with camel ended up throwing the kit away
sad times
You know when it’s taken two years to build that means he has got some serious patience…..
Also why didn’t you strip the previous layers off before you added the new layers?
or just too busy to focus on it lol
If you would put so many layers of paint on the real plane it would be too heavy to take off…😅 Nice result though 👍 The Sopwith is one of my fav planes of WW I (although I feel kinda guilty to fav killing machines in general!)
lol, it was either paint over or strip the original paint . . thought it would just be easier to cover it up
@@ModelMinutes I am totally with you 😅 stripping is always a pain in the neck - and as not too many details are provided I would have done the same. I tried to get back into the 1/72 scale but realized my hands are too big by now…I did my last biplane in 1977 - a Fokker D. VI - my mom helped me painting it. She had experience because of painting her nails and stuff 😅. Thanks for the memories and cheers from Germany…😉
BTW I live in the town the engine for the Fokker was made - Oberursel. It is now Rolls Royce…😉
@@kaidzaack2520 wow, pretty cool!
@@ModelMinutes 😅😉
🤩🤩🤩👍
:D
sad i missed the premiere by 9 hours
perhaps you'll make the next one
Is your kid on tiktok model Mashup?
nope
Are you still playing war thunder
Yeah, but videos on that are uploaded to my second channel
hey matt you should stop doing unboxings and only do builds because you should finish your stash.
yes, but i cant build a model first without doing an unboxing . . .
edit: i'm not buying more models though if that's what you mean
@@ModelMinutes okay but you do not want your stash to last forever but i am not telling you what to do i am just giving advice
@@rasheedkorb9877 at some point I will do an unboxing and build of every kit in my stash
sure that's good also are you enjoying building your kits
@@rasheedkorb9877 love building kits
i wish tamiya would make ww1 planes
i think enough other companies do them so they don't see the need
@@ModelMinutes i guess.
that fairy swordfish one looks amazing though...