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Project Notes

#645 Tachikawa Ki-55

Building a SG$5 bargain Fujimi 1:72 kit of the Tachikawa Ki-55 Type 99 Advanced Trainer.

No electronics in this one.

Build

Notes

The Tachikawa Ki-55 ‘Ida’ was put into production in 1939 as the Tachikawa Army Type 99 Advanced Trainer (キ55九九式高等练习机 - Ki-55 Type 99 Advanced Trainer). By the time production ended in December 1943, 1078 had been built by Tachikawa and 311 by Kawasaki

The Kit

This was a $5 bargain basement find at the 2022 Kits for Kids charity event. Just a bag of parts, and a yellowed set of instructions and decals.

It is a Fujimi kit tooled in 1983.

kit_parts

The decals were pretty ancient and I wasn’t sure if they would be usable. Turns out the answer was “just”.

kit_decals

Paint Scheme

The main paints used:

Feature Color Recommended Paint Used
cockpit interior Navy Blue H-54 70.899 Dark Prussian Blue
cowling, wheel shrouds Cocoa Brown H-17 70.872 Chocolate Brown
fuselage Orange Yellow H-24 + H-3 H-14 with matt yellow undercoat
prop Silver H-8 77.701 Aluminium

The Build

There’s not much cockpit detail, but I was surprised how easily the dashboard pops with just a little paint.

build01a

Assembly is straight-forward and fit is much better than I would expect from a kit of this age.

build01b

A nice weekender;-)

build01c

I was prepared to have to mask/paint the relatively simple markings, but the original kits decals just managed to do the trick.

build02a

The final gallery shots - no special finishing or base for this one (yet).

build03a build03b build03c build03d build03e

Credits and References

About LEAP#645 scale modelsCraft
Project Source on GitHub Project Gallery Return to the LEAP Catalog

This page is a web-friendly rendering of my project notes shared in the LEAP GitHub repository.

LEAP is just my personal collection of projects. Two main themes have emerged in recent years, sometimes combined:

  • electronics - usually involving an Arduino or other microprocessor in one way or another. Some are full-blown projects, while many are trivial breadboard experiments, intended to learn and explore something interesting
  • scale modelling - I caught the bug after deciding to build a Harrier during covid to demonstrate an electronic jet engine simulation. Let the fun begin..
To be honest, I haven't quite figured out if these two interests belong in the same GitHub repo or not. But for now - they are all here!

Projects are often inspired by things found wild on the net, or ideas from the many great electronics and scale modelling podcasts and YouTube channels. Feel free to borrow liberally, and if you spot any issues do let me know (or send a PR!). See the individual projects for credits where due.