History and
Development
In the early nineteen-thirties
Mitsubishi developed the successful Ka-9 twin-engine long-range reconnaissance
aircraft. It followed this up with a twin-engine bomber/transport originally
designated the Ka-15. The prototype was first flown in July 1935. Service
trials made it clear that Mitsubishi had developed an excellent aircraft notable
for its exceptional range. In June 1936 it went into production -
designated the Navy Type 96 attack bomber Model 11 its Mitsubishi designation
was G3M1.
This, the first production
version, was powered by two 910 hp Mitsubishi Kinsei 3 radial engines, and had a
defensive armament of three 7.7 mm (0.30 caliber) machine-guns, in two dorsal
and one ventral turrets, all turrets being retractable. Only 34 of this
version were produced before 1,075 hp Kinsei radials became available. These
resulted in the G3M2 Model 21, which as well as the more powerful engines had
increased fuel capacity.
The new aircraft soon
demonstrated their capabilities on 14 August 1937 when a force of G3M2s based on
Taipei in Formosa attacked targets in China 1,250 miles away - and made history
while they were at it, this being the first transoceanic air attack in history.
The Model 21 was succeeded by the
G3M2 Model 22 in which the defensive armament was increased to one 20mm cannon
and four 7.7 mm machine-guns. The crew was increased from five to seven,
including two additional gunners to man the enhanced armament. The Model
23 featured Kinsei 51 engines and further increased fuel capacity.
In all 1,048 G3Ms were built (636
by Mitsubishi and 412 by Nakajima), many of which were converted for use as
transports. The Allied designation for the bomber versions was 'Nell' and the
transports were 'Tinas'.
The Mitsubishi
G3M Nell (Type 96 Land-Based Attack Bomber or 96 Rikko) over Singapore
With the attack on
Pearl Harbour on 7 December 1941, it is often ignored that virtually at the same
time, the forces of Imperial Japan launched virtually simultaneous air attacks
throughout the Pacific Rim against the Allies on the same day (although time
differences meant these attacks as on the 8th of December local time), with
land-based assets based from Japanese-held Formosa (Taiwan) and Indo-China
(Vietnam and Cambodia). Their targets were Allied installations as diverse as
American targets in the Philippines, the British in Singapore and Malaya and the
Netherlands East Indies. These initial raids were to be followed by sea-borne
landings by Japanese expeditionary forces in these areas, with the ultimate aim
of occupying these resource-rich and strategic lands.
Among these attacks
was a planned raid on Singapore by 34 Rikkos of the Genzan Kokutai
based in Saigon in Indo-China. Had this taken place, it would have been timed to
coincide with the Pearl Harbour attack, however bad weather forced this raid to
turn back, along with 14 of 31 Rikkos of the Mihoro Kokutai based
at Thu Dau Moi that took off a few hours later. The remaining 17 aircraft made
it to Singapore however, and at 0415 Local bombs fell on Singapore city, Tengah
and Seletar Airfields, and the Naval Yard at Sembawang. Little damage of
military value was done beyond 3 severely damaged Blenheims at Tengah, although
61 people (mainly civilians) were killed in Singapore. The war had started.
Two days later, on
the 10th of December, Rikkos of the Genzan and Mihoro Kokutais,
together with the G4M1 Type 1 Bettys of the Kanoya Kokutai, attacked and
sank the HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Repulse off the coast of Kuantan, Malaya in
a spectacular bomb and torpedo attack. The British battlewagons had been sent to
disrupt the landings in northern Malaya and southern Siam (Thailand), but had
turned south to investigate (erroneous) reports of landings in Kuantan. It was
the first time that major capital ships had been sunk in open water by aircraft,
and settled once and for all the debate of aircraft being credible naval strike
assets against capital ships without air cover. The loss of the 2 ships, the
only Allied capital ships in SE Asia at that time, along with 840 sailors dealt
a blow to morale the Allies were never able to recover from throughout the
campaign, and effectively spelt the death knell for the Allied defence of South
East Asia. The Mihoro Kokutai, as in over Singapore two days before, drew
first blood in this action, with a 250kg bomb hit on the Repulse early in the
action. However, the bulk of the damage was done by the torpedo-armed Rikkos
and Bettys of the Genzan and Kanoya Kokutais respectively. A 500kg bomb
from another Rikko of the Mihoro Kokutai hit the Prince of Wales
later, but by that time both ships were already sinking.
The Rikkos
were little involved over Singapore for much of December, restricted to
supporting the invasion of Malaya, long range patrols over the South China Sea
and attacks on Allied targets in Borneo. This changed dramatically in late
December, when Japanese reconnaissance showed that the defenders had
significantly beefed up air power over Singapore. A decision was reached to
start a combined aerial blitz on Singapore by the Army and Navy Air Forces,
which for the IJNAF started on New Year's Day 1942 and ended on the 29th of that
month. During this time the Navy flew more than 400 sorties against Singapore,
mainly against the airfields of Tengah, Sembawang, Seletar and Kallang, as well
as the Royal Navy Yard in Sembawang and the harbour at Keppel. The Allied
defenders tried manfully to oppose these attacks, but with the raids usually
escorted by Mitsubishi A6M2 Zeros of the 22nd Air Flotilla's attached fighter
unit, as well as the defenders' use of older aircraft flown by inexperienced
pilots operating with little advance warning, meant that the effectiveness of
the fighter defence over Singapore was often marginal at best, and the result
that the Rikkos suffered comparatively light losses. The assault on
Singapore was left to the Army after the 29th, and the Rikkos thereafter
being restricted to attacking shipping convoys attempting to reinforce (and
later evacuate) the defenders of Singapore.
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The Kit
This kit is a very
old one, and probably dates from the 1970s. The box says 1/72, but a check with
the j-aircraft website (See References below) indicates that the scale is
actually 1/75 (I believe LS initially released this as such). LS also released a
couple of other boxings of the Nell, including the later Model 22/23 with it's
increased defensive armament which necessitated a new fuselage with waist
blisters and an enlarged dorsal "greenhouse" turret. The kit has also
been re-boxed by ARII. I'm not sure of the reason for the odd scale, but it
might probably be something to do with the metric system or because it was a
popular scale then before 1/72 took over (same reason why old Tamiya and Heller
kits are scaled 1/50).
Upon opening the
small (compared to the Hasegawa Nell) one is greeted with two main sprues of
parts moulded in light grey and black. Fuselage halves and wings (split left and
right, top and bottom) are loose, not attached to any sprues. Another sprue of
thick clear parts was also included. Panel lines were engraved (nice touch for
such an old kit), along with about a million rivets all over the fuselage and
wings. Fabric detail on the (very long) ailerons and elevators was restrained
but a bit soft (showing its age?), with the ailerons being separate pieces from
the wing parts. Three grossly misshapen pilots were included (they were tossed,
naturally) while the parts showed some flash, small sink marks and ejector pin
marks which required cleaning. To sum it up, there's nothing overly bad, and to
be honest, for a kit this old, quite good actually.
Detail is simple,
with the cockpit consisting of a floor, three seats (Two which looked like
lounge room single sofas and another which looked like a bar stool!), two
control columns and an instrument panel. No interior detaisl were provided for
the retractable "dustbin" ventral MG mount or dorsal turrets. Weapons
included consist of a single machine-gun (not used), a Type 91 torpedo and eight
60-kg bombs. There were also optional parts for the Model 11 and 21, including
different engine cowlings, dorsal turret/observation window configurations and
other little fiddly bits.
Instructions were
mainly in Japanese, with only some historical information of the Nell, along
with paint scheme information of the various aircraft included in the decals in
English. However anyone who can read numbers and has ever built a model before
should have no problems following the instructions. A nice touch is an
additional colour supplement for the various paint schemes and marking options
included in the kit.
The decals were of
matt and looked reasonably thin. What was a pleasant change was that white is
actually pure white and not the ivory white seen in today's Hasegawa kit decals.
The white surrounds on the Japanese Hinomaru markings were unfortunately
out of register. Markings included were for five different aircraft:
- G3M1 Model 11 of
the Kisarazu Kokutai in overall NMF with red tail, China
- G3M1 Model 11 of the Kanoya Kokutai
in overall NMF with red tail, China
- G3M1 Model 11 of the Kanoya Kokutai
in Green over NMF, China
- G3M1 Model 11 of the Genzan Kokutai
in Green over NMF, China
- G3M2 Model 21 of the Mihoro Kokutai
in Brown & Green over NMF, Malaya and Netherlands East Indies
Construction
Construction started with the cockpit.
Ejector pin marks on the insides of the fuselage were sanded off. The seats were
then glued to the floor and the assembly along with the interior sides of the
fuselage were sprayed with Mitsubishi Interior Green from the Gunze Mr. Color
range. The instrument panel was painted Tyre Black with the instrument dials
painted in Black and a drop of Gloss Clear added. Control columns were painted
in Metallic Silver with handgrips in Flat Black and glued to the cockpit floor
assembly.
The fuselage halves were then joined
together. Fit here was average, with some slight panel line mis-alignment and
the rather prominent seams. These were eliminated with a combination of Tamiya
putty and Super-Glue and sanded down. Quite a few panel lines and rivets were
lost in the process and had to be restored. It was at this point where the lack
of detail in the cockpit being painfully obvious, with a big hole in the rear of
the cockpit which enabled one too look in the back of the kit fuselage. I
decided to fashion a simple bulkhead out of plastic card, with a rectangular
crew access hole cut in it and some assorted black boxes added. All fictional I
know (so sue me!), but at least it made the crew compartment a whole lot better
than before.
Next up were the wings, tails and
stabilizers. The vertical tails were glued to the horizontal stabilizers, and
putty was used to fill some small gaps. Test fitting showed the horizontal
stabilizer fit to the fuselage was almost perfect, with no gaps at all. Ejector
pin marks on the landing gear doors were sanded/filled next, and then the rather
bare wheel wells were painted in Mitsubishi Interior Green along with the
landing gear doors. The wings had to be assembled in such a way that you have to
cement the landing gear struts onto the bottom wing halves first, before
attaching the upper wings. There is a simple toy-like mechanism for raising and
lowering the landing gear, but I fixed the undercarriage in the lowered position
anyway. After the glue has dried, the top wing halves were joined. Fit was again
ok, with some sanding and filling of gaps and steps between the halves but
nothing major. This was also the case with the wing and fuselage joints, and
after the gaps here are fixed, the engine cowlings were glued onto the wings.
Take note here, the instructions do not show too clearly how and where to
install the top air scoops onto the cowling, the trick here is to align the
scoop directly above the notch for joining the cowlings to to the wing. The
contours on the air scoop were a perfect match to that on the cowlings, while
the engine detail, though moulded onto the one piece cowling is still EXTREMELY
sharp and is no slouch compared to some more modern 1/72 kits.
All major components are now done, and its
time for a trip to the paint shop.
Painting, Decals and Final
Construction
The IJNAF painted its multi-engined aircraft in what was
known as the Kumogata scheme for operations over China and up to early
mid-to-late-1942. This is a field-applied scheme consisting of a random brown
and green camouflage applied over the wing and fuselage upper surfaces over NMF
undersurfaces. Most references show this as IJN Grey, but Francois P. Weill's
excellent article on Japanese camouflage and paint quality on the j-aircraft
website (see References below) makes a convincing case that it was NMF used, so
I went along with that.
The whole model was sprayed in Tamiya AS-12 Bare Metal
Silver sprayed straight from the spray can. As the Kumogata scheme was a
field applied camouflage, there was no fixed camouflage patterns used for
various types. Indeed, there was no fixed pattern for each aircraft in a unit
even, and all aircraft had different patterns sprayed on. Definitely no TOs to
follow here Ladies and Gentlemen! I used Gunze Acrylic RAF Dark Earth for the
Earth Brown on the scheme, sprayed over the entire upper surface after masking
off the NMF undersurfaces, then masked off the Brown Areas with masking tape
before applying the Green. The camouflage pattern came from a profile in the
book "Mitsubishi/Nakajima G3M1/2/3 96 Rikko in Japanese Naval Air
Service" (see References) based on the pattern found on a photo of a Rikko
of the Mihoro Kokutai. Weathering was done by scraping the top (blunt)
edge of a hobby knife along the paint which had not cured completely, exposing
the NMF below the camouflage colours. Reference photos showed that weathering
was heavier along the wing leading edges near the wing root and vertical, nose
and forward fuselage, with the rear fuselage and other areas showing less signs
of paint peeling, and I tried to replicate this on the model.
Decals were from the kit, and were less than satisfactory.
I found the decals to be very stubborn, requiring a long soak in hot water
before coming loose, and despite being thin, they were very resistant to the
Gunze Mr. Mark Softer decal solution I used. They were also slightly
translucent, but after some struggles I managed to get them to work, although
they did not snuggle down to the panel lines and rivets that well. After this
the panel lines were highlighted using the pastel chalk wash method as found on
the ARC Tools 'n Tips Section. This is the first time I'm using this method, and
I must say I'm impressed!
To finish off the kit, the small parts were added on after
this. I wanted to build a bomber, but the eight 60kg bombs given in the kit were
pretty poorly shaped and moulded, so I tossed them and used a pair of similar
bombs that came with the Fujimi D4Y Judy kit. This was a standard loadout for a
long range overwater patrol mission, which the Rikkos were frequently
tasked with during the invasion of Malaya and Singapore, keeping the sea lanes
around the South China Sea clear of Allied shipping. The bombs were painted
Gunze Grey-Green, and the nose tip of the bombs were painted green and a blue
stripe added as instructed by an article I found on the painting of IJN ordnance
in the Research Section of the j-aircraft.com website. The entire model was then
given a final coat of Flat Clear from the Gunze Acrylic line.
Conclusions
This is an nice kit and builds up to an pretty good representation of the
aircraft. Sure, it ain't Tamigawa in detail or fit, and the Hasegawa Nell beats
it hands down in every department as a representation of the real thing, but
considering I got this kit at $6 in Singapore dollars (US$1 = S$1.7) at a 1/2
off sale, and the Hasegawa Nell costs at least S$45 at the local shops, there is
no doubt who offers more bang for your buck. The fit problems I've encountered
in building this kit should not be a problem for anyone with average modeling
skills (like me!). For a kit that's around 30 years old, the engineering is
fine. If you can look beyond the fact that it contains 1970s level of detail,
the slight problems with the decal quality and the odd scale, this kit will give
you lots of modeling fun.
References
Mitsubishi G3M Nell on the Combat Aircraft of the Pacific
War Website http://www.angelfire.com/fm/compass/G3M.htm
The J-Aircraft website at
http://www.j-aircraft.com
Francois P. Weill's excellent research article on Japanese
paints and camouflage (at the J-aircraft website) at
http://www.j-aircraft.com/research/weathering_question.htm
(MUST-READ for anyone wanting to paint IJN or IJA models!)
"Bloody Shambles Volume 1: The Drift to War to the
Fall of Singapore" by Shores/Cull/Izawa, Grub Street Books.
"Scale Aircraft Modeling Combat Colours No.4: Pearl
Habour and Beyond" by Bridgwater/Scott/Robinson, Guideline Publications.
"Mitsubishi/Nakajima G3M1/2/3 96 Rikko in Japanese
Naval Air Service" by Richard Bueschel, Schiffer Military History.
"Mitsubishi
Type 1 Rikko Betty Units of World War 2"
(Osprey Combat Aircraft 22) by Osamu Tagaya, Osprey
Publications.
"Battleship: The Sinking of the Prince of Wales and
the Repulse" by Middlebrook/Mahoney, Penguin Books
Mike
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