Starting this year, I plan to have an annual aircraft project that is superdetailed ie. with as many aftermarket products and scratchbuilding as possible. This year, I will try to tackle The
F-16D Blk 40 'Barak', which is flown by the Isreali Defence Forces/Air Force (IDF/AF). Base kit for this will be the Hasegawa F-16D. I plan to add the following things to it:
- Blackbox F-16D cockpit
- Wolfpack Designs F-16D 'Barak' conversion set
- Aires F-16 wheel bays
- Paragon Designs Python 4 air-to-air missiles
- Isradecal F-16C/D Barak decals
First up, the cockpit. I've had the Blackbox cockpit set for many years now and it's only seeing the light of day now. Scuttlebutt is that the newer Aires set's better but this is what I have so it'll have to do.
Besides, it's still a very nicely detailed set of resin.

First up, testfitting. Almost all resin cockpit sets need to be cut and trimmed to fit the kit and this one's no different. Blackbox molds the front and rear sections as separate tubs


For the front tub, I marked off what was needed to be sawed off and proceeded to slowly (and carefully) saw off. Took some elbow grease but I got it to fit into the kit perfectly.


Then came the rear tub which took a lot of cutting and scraping. So much so I ended up taking off the whole floorboard. I then superglued a 0.5mm piece of plastic card as a replacement floorboard. I also had to cut up some of the plastic in the kit's lower fuselage before the tub fit right.



Next came the seats which to my horror, had parts broken off. Actually I didn't notice it until I saw the illustration on the instructions. There are supposed to be 2 protrusions, 1 on each side of the seat cushion. These are pretty obvious so I may have to scratchbuild from plastic card.


The bottom of the seats needed to be trimmed quite a fair bit before they would fit under the canopy. While I'll be posing the kit with canopy open, I didn't want the seats to look like they were protruding out of the cockpit.


After I was done, I realized how much resin dust I had accumulated. This is dangerous stuff man. I have been told I should consider wetting the resin before cutting them. We'll see how that goes.

Next up, more work on the cockpit including sidewalls, which I am told will probably need to be ground thin with a grinder...