1/72 Hobbycraft CT-114 

Tutor Double Feature

by Justin Davenport

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The Canadair CL-41 Tutor was designed in the late 1950’s as a primary jet trainer and light attack aircraft, and became one of several indigenous Canadian designs to serve with the Royal Canadian Air Force. The Tutor, designated CT-114 by the RCAF, entered service in the early 1960’s and served until the dawn of the 21st century as the RCAF/CAF’s primary trainer aircraft with the 2nd Flying Training School (the Big 2), preparing many pilots to fly the CF-5 Freedom Fighter, CF-100 Canuck, CF-101 Voodoo, and CF-18 Hornet. Of course, the Tutor still flies for the Snowbirds demonstration team, which I got to see for the first time earlier this year when they and I ended up in Galveston, Texas on the same weekend (another family trip), and the Tutor also flies for the AETE, the Canadian Air Force’s aircraft testing establishment.

In 1967, Canada celebrated the 100th anniversary of its founding. As part of the celebration, the RCAF formed a team of nine Tutors that would be designated the “Golden Centennaires”. This team would fly 100 displays and then be disbanded (actually the Centennaires got to fly 108 displays, including a few in the United States), and was the precursor to the famous Snowbirds. The Centennaires were known for their pale gold over dark blue scheme and their routines.

During the 1968-69 time frame, two of the Centennaires’ Tutors were repainted into the “Red Knight” colors to replace that team‘s T-33‘s. The Red Knight was a solo demonstration act that flew to many smaller air shows that could not support a larger team like the Centennaires, and the Red Knight always operated on a shoestring budget relative to other air force aerobatic teams. In fact, one interesting story related to me (thanks Colin K!) was that a Red Knight pilot had to pay for 660 bucks worth of red acrylic paint at a Winnipeg store to repaint the Tutors due to the fact there was no money in the air base’s budget for painting. And this 660 dollars was a month’s pay. Tragically, a crash in 1969 ended the Red Knight. A Red Knight type solo demonstration team would be a great thing to bring back for airshow goers like myself in North America.

This is the cockpit for the Golden Centennaires jet. The Red Knight cockpit was identical.

THE MODEL

Last year, I got a Hobbycraft 1/72nd scale Tutor kit from Uncle Bill’s Hobby mailed to Salt Lake because I’d intended to do a Snowbird aircraft, and I still do. But during my trip to the Canadian Maritime provinces (family cruise) a couple of months ago, “Cheetah” Arsenault and I took a trip to the Train Trax hobby shop near Saint John, New Brunswick. I rummaged through their decal offerings and found a couple of interesting sheets from Arrow Graphics, one of which was the Golden Centennaires Tutor, which I had wanted to build ever since I first saw pictures of that aircraft (thanks Cheetah!). I ended up buying a boatload of Canadian decals and taking them home.

Fast forward to late November. The Rocky Mountain Modeling Club of Calgary, Alberta started an RCAF/CAF group build. I’m a sucker for group builds and I’m game for building just about anything. So I pondered what Canadian subject to build and got started on the GC Tutor one night. Right away I noticed that the cockpit (as well as the kit itself) was incredibly basic and lacked detail. And so much of the cockpit is visible through the canopy, so I asked about a resin replacement, and alas there was none. So after getting some photos kindly sent to me by Colin K, as well as looking at the ARC walkarounds, I was ready to scratch build some detail. After spray painting the ‘pit medium gray (Tamiya haze gray) and painting the cushions on the seats red, I used Tamiya tape to simulate seatbelts and harnesses, painted with light ghost gray, but with olive drab attachments to the side of the seats. I also dry brushed flat black to highlight raised detail on the instrument panel and used a Sharpie pen to fill out the instrument dials, and I used Tamiya tape painted light ghost gray to simulate the cockpit side lining, scoring the tape with a hobby knife to simulate the lining pattern. Finally, I cut out a pair of extensions from Evergreen styrene and glued them to the bottom left sides of the seats, then created an ejection handle for these extensions out of thin Evergreen rod, and painted the handle the standard yellow with black stripes. I finished the cockpit and was all set to glue it into the fuselage….then I noticed a major problem. The instrument panel sat much too high in the ‘pit and would have obscured most of the windshield. I wasn’t quite sure what to do, but I ended up cutting off the rudder pedals to shorten the instrument panel assembly. I glued the instrument panel flush with the very front of the kit cockpit opening but I realize now that is the wrong location and there should be a small coaming between the front of the opening and the instrument panel. Ah well. I glued the cockpit in and noticed a major gap on the right side of the aft wall between the bulkhead and the outer fuselage….so out came the putty!

I was now ready to glue the fuselage halves together, and I did, but the halves did not fit well at all, and using Ambroid Pro Weld didn‘t close the seam. The wing (molded as one piece) fit all right at the root but poorly on the bottom fuselage. I ended up using a lot of Tamiya putty and doing a lot of sanding to make the bird look reasonably seamless. I tried to sand the surface smooth for the upcoming Alclad finish and for the most part I succeeded in removing the most obvious scratches. Finally, I scratched some trenches on the nose area right under the windshield to simulate the vents that are shown in the instructions but not molded into the kit!

Click on images below to see larger images

THE PAINT JOB

When the wings and horizontal tail were dry, and the canopy firmly secured with clear parts cement, I used Parafilm to mask the Tutor’s canopy, then sprayed the whole aircraft haze gray, so that the canopy frames would be the interior color if viewed from inside the cockpit. Then I sprayed the whole craft Tamiya Bare Metal Silver and masked off the wing, stabilizer, and tail leading edges. After a day of drying, I broke out the Alclad Pale Gold and it sprayed onto the Tutor like a charm. At this point I was very happy. Then I noticed another problem. I had cut down and sanded the kit nose strakes (much too thick!) and glued them on….only to discover that the GC bird didn’t have them. So I cut them off and sanded down the nose until it was smooth again. (The strakes were added to the Tutor later because the bird was too stable without them and would not spin, the strakes enabled spinning training.)

I masked the gold top and airbrushed MM Acryl Blue Angel Blue for the bottom. Everything looked good when I unmasked the bird, except that a slight overspray had gotten onto the vertical tail, and the canopy framing looked jagged, edges not crisp. I resolved to leave the horizontal tail off on the next Tutor until after decaling, and I touched up the canopy frames and tail with MM Acryl Gold.

I also cut out the side decals and measured the area where a gold circle was needed, then painted a gold circle where the emblem would go. I got started with the decals, with the white fuselage stripes first. I had not realized that the carrier film was present throughout the whole sheet, and had not cut off enough of it when I put the decal on, therefore I was forced to touch up “filmy” areas with Future and Blue Angel Blue. The decal also didn’t adhere too well to curves, but I finally wrestled it into a semi-acceptable state. Finally I got all the decals onto the bird, then it was time to finish the bird. Thanks to info from Sean Bratton and other Canucks on ARC, I learned that the Hobbycraft kit’s landing gear is much too long, so I used my handy Tamiya sprue clippers to cut about 4-5 mm from the gear legs (I eyeballed it!), and used 20 second thick CA to glue the gears onto the bird. I sprayed accelerator to cause the glue to dry once I was satisfied with the gear placement and angle. I painted the wheel wells silver, the tires scale black, used a silver Sharpie pen for the intake front lips, and gunmetal for the jet pipe in the back. The top navigation light was painted silver, then Tamiya clear red.

At this point I realized I’d forgotten to include the aft smoke pipe and fitting, so I scratch built one out of thin Evergreen styrene sheet and brushed Blue Angel Blue on it after gluing. Evergreen rod was used to make the extension pointing upward to the horizontal stabilizer. I also used that same styrene sheet and the sprue clippers to cut out a couple of antennae, and used CA to glue them onto the bird. Finally, the clear wing leading edge lights provided in the kit would not fit into their slots, so I filled in the yawning notch with layers of clear parts cement applied over a two day period. After the fuel tanks were glued on to the bottom, the bird was done! I was fairly satisfied, but the build and the research had left me wanting to build another Tutor…….

Click on images below to see larger images

THE RED KNIGHT

The more I looked at my Red Knight decal sheet, the more I was intrigued. I looked up some more info on that bird, and suddenly I was ready to start. I’d learned a few lessons from the first bird that made the Red Knight construction go more smoothly. For starters, I cut off the locating pins in the fuselage halves. This enabled me to bond the fuselage halves with a minimum of putty; the Ambroid Pro Weld worked a lot better this time. The cockpit was done in the same manner as the GC bird, except the instrument panel was moved a tiny bit back into a more proper location. (I still had to cut off the rudder pedals). I also scratch built the smoke pipe fairing and glued it onto the aft end of the Tutor, by the jet pipe, before I started any painting. I glued on the wings and had to use a little putty on the wing roots and a LOT of putty on the bottom as well as lots of sanding. I also had to put putty on the nose and sand it; I got myself a Flexi-File and used it to sand the nose to avoid “squaring” off round areas and it worked great. Finally, I left off the strakes, the Red Knight didn’t have them either.

After finally being satisfied with the sanding and polishing efforts, and masking the canopy with Tamiya tape carefully cut, I sprayed the bird haze gray and then Bare Metal Silver. Then came the toughest part of the build, namely, figuring out which shade of red to use for the bird. I tried Tamiya Italian Red but it was too red, not orangish enough. So I ended up airbrushing the bird with MM Acryl Italian Red, which has a more orangish tint, and it turned out to be a perfect match. I sprayed several thinner coats over a period of two hours and that left me with a finish I was satisfied with. The decals came on, and they went on a lot better, probably because I cut the decals from the sheet more closely to their outlines and used warm water. Then came the landing gear, drop tanks, and horizontal stabilizer, and the clear landing lights in the wing leading edge, done in the same manner as the GC model, and I was done. My Tutors are missing a pitot tube on the right wingtip which I’ll include later, I just noticed this today. The Red Knight model looks cleaner and better to me than the Golden Centennaires bird I did because of what I learned.

CONCLUSION

I had a lot of fun learning about and building the Tutors, and more jet trainers are in my future, including more Tutors as well as Tweety Birds, Talons, and Strikemasters. I’m planning to do a Snowbirds Tutor in the near future, along with the Black Knight, the NATO 50th anniversary bird, a regular CAF training bird, and the CL-41R radar trainer with the needle nose.

Happy Modeling!

Justin

REFERENCES:

Many thanks to Colin Kunkel, Charlie Arsenault, Sean Bratton, Tilt, Emil Varosi, and Barney Dunlevy for their help and encouragement on this project.

Click on images below to see larger images

 

 

Photos and text © by Justin Davenport