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IJN Mikasa

Build-Up
by Dade W. Bell
Kit: IJN Mikasa "Battle of The Japan Sea" (Tsushima Strait)
(kit #40021 Z-21)
Manufacturer: Hasegawa
Scale 1/350
Media: Injection Molded Styrene, chain
Price: $99.95 (MSRP) |
| Pros: one
of the few Pre-Dreadnoughts available in plastic in 1/350, excellent
fit, great instructions, flag options (straight or waving), metal
anchor chain, limited edition goodies (lithograph, Togo figure,
commemorative coin). |
| Cons: price,
no detail under the waterline, oversize deck planking, this kit
has a proof of purchase to send away and get a display case but
is only available to Japanese residents, Hasegawa purposely left
out many PE parts so they could turn around and sell two detail
sets for an additional $100 or so combined (!!!) (they also do
this with their new Yukikaze). |
History:
The Mikasa was built in 1902 for the IJN by Vickers, Sons &
Maxim in England for the price of 880,000 pounds. She was a modification
of the Royal Navy's Majestic Class, itself a development of the
Royal Sovereign Class. The Mikasa outclassed her Majestic sisters
with increased displacement (15,140 tons versus 14,900), a speed
increase of one knot for a maximum of 18, additional armament,
and high strength Krupp armor that was about 50% stronger than
the Harvey armor on the Majestics (this same type of armor disadvantage
would haunt the British at Jut land 14 years later against the
Imperial German High Seas Fleet, also armored with Krupp steel).
With an armament of four 12" guns, fourteen 6" guns,
sixteen 12 pounders, four 47 mm rapid fire guns, and four underwater
45.7 cm torpedo tubes, the Mikasa was the most powerful battleship
of her time. She was the IJN's flagship during the Russo-Japanese
War of 1904-1905. In the Battle of The Yellow Sea, the Japanese
fleet, under the command of Admiral Togo (among his officers
was a young Isoroku Yamamoto) won a great victory over the Russian
fleet by keeping the Russians holed up in Port Arthur and not
allowing them to escape to Vladivostok. During this battle, the
Mikasa sustained 20 hits with no major damage (these were the
days when the flagship still headed the line of battle and was
thus a magnet for enemy fire).Later in the Battle of Tsushima,
a leaner fit of the Mikasa with two less yardarms and more lifeboats
took 30 hits with no major damage. This battle was a decisive
victory that came a few months shy of the 100th anniversary of
Nelson's decisive victory at Trafalgar. Despite being outnumbered,
the Japanese sunk 21 Russian ships, captured 7, and disarmed
6 at a cost of only 3 torpedo boats. The Russians lost 4,380
dead to the Japanese 117.
The Mikasa was sunk in harbor during World War 2, but after
the war, Admiral Chester Nimitz headed up efforts to have her
raised. She is now a museum ship encased in concrete, located
in Yokosuka near the Kure Arsenal and US Navy base.
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The Model:
Hasegawa has produced two models of the Mikasa. One is the fit
she appeared in at the Battle of The Yellow Sea. This kit includes
a copy of the guidebook you receive when visiting the Mikasa
museum and a set of twelve postcards. The Mikasa's masts each
contain one extra yardarm and arms gallery so that gunners
had a high, wide arc of fire during boarding of enemy ships.
The other kit is the Mikasa at the Battle of Tsushima Strait
(known to the Japanese, and labeled on the box, as The Battle
of The Japan Sea). This kit contains a lithograph of Admiral
Togo standing on the Mikasa's bridge during battle, a 54mm figure
of Admiral Togo, and a commemorative coin in either gold or silver
(mine was silver- boo-hoo). If you're a resident of Japan, you
can also send in a proof of purchase and Hasegawa will send you
a nice display case fitted perfectly for the Mikasa. Those of
us living outside of Japan are left to stare with envy at the
back of the slipcase showing the Mikasa in the display case.
It is this version of the kit that I have built.Others have written
extensive in-box reviews (the most notable is on steelnavy.com)
so I'm only going to give my thoughts on the actual construction
process.To start, as with all things Hasegawa, everything goes
together beautifully. The hull halves match up nicely and require
minimal filler and cleanup. An immediate problem is that there
is NO hull detail below the waterline. With the exception of
two stabilizing fins and four bilge holes, nothing. No ribs,
steel plate, or torpedo doors. Considering this was the war in
which Japan began its great lead in torpedo warfare, the lack
of torpedo doors is really bizarre.The builder installs a series
of support braces along the top of the hull that the deck goes
on top of. This keeps the deck from sagging and really makes
the whole thing very strong. The deck is made in three pieces:
front, center, and back. This seems scary at first until you
realize that the places where the deck joins together will all
be hidden and actually fits together quite nicely. The instructions
are wonderfully laid out and very easy to follow with color callouts
throughout. So, as long as you're simply gluing together everything
out of box with no painting at all, the kit is a masterpiece.Of
course, that's the problem. Because we ARE going to paint this
model and that's when you start to realize something's wrong...
For starters, the deck planking is WAY too big. And then you
notice that all of that neato detail molded on to the deck is
going to be a major hassle to mask off and paint. Why are things
like the skylights molded into the deck? Or the turret barbettes?
Wouldn't it have been much easier to simply make these things
separate? Then you would only have to paint and weather the deck,
paint all the little doo-dads and then glue them on. But no,
that would be too easy. Instead, get ready for some masking!But
wait! Not yet! Good Thing: Hasegawa provides chain for the anchors.
Bad Thing: The hawse pipes are solid. Hasegawa wants you to cut
the chain, glue it on the top leading to the hawse, then another
length running from the hawse to the anchors. There are skylights
depicted on the deck, but these are solid. So, first you have
to drill out the hawse (including the molded in solid grills)
on the deck, the anchor chain source holes, and the hawse on
the hull sides. Then you must drill out the skylights if you
want them to look anywhere near realistic.This is where another
issue begins to rear its ugly head. There is ZERO supplemental
detail on this kit. No rails, no funnel rings, solid portholes,
solid skylights, solid gun barrels, solid ladders, little plastic
nubs molded on the lifeboats instead of actual cradles, the bridge
is a ham-fisted solid window affair. Hasegawa couldn't even be
bothered to make some decent funnel caps and grills, and instead
makes a clunky solid hunk of plastic that screams "toy" rather
than "this costs $85 on the street"!Ah! What's this?
Hasegawa DOES make this stuff! Oh, you mean I only have to pay
another $100 street for their own TWO detail sets? Wow, that's
swell! Friends, if this ain't some kind of racket, I don't know
what is. While Dragon and Trumpeter have been upping the ante
with great multimedia kits including plenty of PE for low prices,
Hasegawa is acting like we're still wallowing around in the dark
ages of modeling when PE was an arcane science reserved for only
those with the best connections and the biggest wallets. This
business model is apparently working nicely because Hasegawa's
new IJN Yukikaze pulls the same sort of nonsense. I know Dragon
does something similar with their Cyber Hobby detail sets, but
at least the base Dragon kits already come with a ton of PE,
so the Cyber Hobby stuff is only a nice option. On Hasegawa's
Mikasa, a detail set isn't optional, it's a REQUIREMENT.Having
read great things about Gold Medal Models' (GMM) PE set, I decided
to go that route and not buy into Hasegawa's racket. I also saved
about $60. Now to be fair, for the price, Hasegawa also gives
you turned metal gun barrels for the main guns, resin lifeboat
covers, and metal screws. But then again, for about $60, I could
buy Lion Roar's set that includes the four main barrels, plus
14 secondary battery barrels. I usually feel that you get what
you pay for and price is no object for a professional finish,
but we're talking over $150 in detail sets alone to have everything.
It's a madhouse! But enough of this. I can drill out the main
barrels and the other guns are so small, a dot of black paint
will do the trick, so GMM it is!When the GMM set arrived (ordered
from Pacific Front), I happily got down to business. First, shave
off all of the solid skylight detail and hollow out the enclosures
(drill out the portholes while you're at it). Glue on GMM's skylight
enclosures. Replace the weird solid hawse grill that was drilled
while opening up the hawse with GMM's hawse grills. Things are
already looking up! Well, not quite. You still have all of that
masking to do. It took me a total of four hours to do all of
the deck masking (two movies came on TV in the background during
this time). The deck was painted deck tan and the rest was painted
Kure Arsenal Gray.SCREEECH? Huh? Kure What Who? Okay, when the
Mikasa was delivered from Vickers, the Japanese painted her gray
for her service with the IJN. This was done at the Kure Arsenal
in Yokosuka. The Kure Arsenal are the fine folks who would later
bring us the Yamato. The Kure Arsenal had their own shade of
gray and that's the color the Mikasa was painted. Thankfully,
Squadron carries Kure Arsenal Gray in both acrylic (XF-75 IJN
Gray) and spray lacquer. Good thing we need Kure Arsenal Gray
because Squadron only carries the spray lacquer for the Sasebo
Arsenal and not the acrylic (if it even exists).

So anyway, the deck gets painted with the gray as is the hull
above the waterline. I start work on the funnels, using GMM's
nifty little jig to make sure the funnel rings are aligned. The
funnel cap goes on, followed by the grills, the stock ladders
replaced by the GMM PE parts and rails are added to the forward
funnel to make the funnels have twice as many parts as they would
stock. The funnels alone are a great advertisement for GMM. They're
gorgeous and true works of art. It's a shame to paint them, but
paint them I must.All of the kit ladders are ditched for the
PE ones. The forward and rear bridges are also ditched for PE
assemblies with actual open windows and separate doors! The main
bridge even has a PE ships' wheel and throttle to go inside.
The solid captain's walk is also thrown out in favor of GMM's
jewel-like assembly with separate railing top and separate name
plate (an extra is included in case the first gets lost in the
carpet).Hasegawa doesn't give you any main deck or lifeboat deck
rails. They give you "canvas covered" rails for the
upper bridge areas and spotlight platforms, but these are pretty
bad (Hasegawa's own detail set has replacements for these!).
So, out they go! GMM gives you rails cut to length for each position.
They also give you a choice of canvas covered rails for the upper
areas with double-sided etching showing canvas on one side and
the rails on the inside. I chose to go with the standard rails
simply because they're so intricate. In areas where there are
chain lengths, individual chain links can actually be seen on
GMM's parts!A word on GMM's brass. It's thicker than White Ensign's
or Tom's. If you're used to gluing down WE's foil-like rails
as you go, you have to throw that idea out with GMM. In their
excellent instructions, GMM tells you to pre-bend the rails to
shape, paint them and then mount them on to your painted kit.
There's nothing wrong with this per se- it's just that you may
have to work differently than you're used to. A major travesty
on Hasegawa's parts is the torpedo net walkway. It's solid. To
compound matters, the six inch guns aim just above the walkway
with their center gun doors resting on the walkway. Hasegawa
actually molds the gun doors to the walkway itself! What the...?
So, the kit walkways get the heave-ho and GMM's parts go on instead
followed by GMM's SEPARATE gun doors. Muuuuch better!Now it's
time to start working on the fleet of lifeboats. Each lifeboat
comes with its boat cradles molded on to the bottom in a goofy
lump of plastic with no detail at all. These weird things have
to be sawed off each boat and replaced with GMM's boat cradles
which are an order of magnitude better. GMM also provides rudders
for the large launches and the smaller steam launch. But now
there's trouble in paradise.First, the boat cradles don't fit
very well and a lot of filing has to be done to the boat hulls
to make them fit. Then, when dry fitting, you see that those
rudders will actually collide with the rear casemate and not
fit. So the rudders have to be taken off. Let's try fitting the
boats now... Disaster! The boat cradles are actually so wide
that they collide with GMM's own rails on the inside edges of
the lifeboat gallery. It's really strange to see such a boneheaded
thing happen to an otherwise excellent set of PE. After a lot
of head scratching, cursing, and some more head scratching, I
decided to bite the bullet and clip the rails where the boat
cradles intruded. Thankfully, the array of lifeboats mostly hides
this unless you really look close, but it's there nonetheless.
Keep this in mind if you ever intend to enter one of these in
a show.We're in the homestretch! A couple of paint touch-ups
here, an Imperial Chrysanthemum mounting there, and we're almost
ready for prime time. Now it's time for that process that scares
most grown men and makes ladies of a delicate nature faint- the
RIGGING!The kit doesn't help much either because there are many
points where the rigging is supposed to go, but there are no
base points. GMM comes with turnbuckles and tie downs, but that
still doesn't help the fact that there are at least 20 anchorings
that are nonexistent on the kit. I have nearly every source on
the Mikasa known to man (there's a Model Art special just out
I need to get my hands on) and even then, things are dicey. So,
you just have to take a deep breath and create your own. We're
already close to a hundred hours here, what's a couple more?
Thankfully, the kit DOES have plenty of other anchor points to
work with so all is not lost.For my rigging, I use fly fishing
tippet which is a type of resin coated thread that will hold
its shape and is very strong (lures are made out of this stuff).
Now comes the voodoo. For my support rigging (funnels and masts)
I use 6/0, which is .005 mm. For standard rigging, I use 8/0
which is .003 mm. Did you catch that? The higher number tippet
corresponds to the SMALLER diameter. At the meeting, I'm sure
I confused a few people when I said the thicker stuff was .006
mm and the thin line was .008 mm. As you can see, I accidentally
put the tippet number in place of the actual diameter. My thanks
to Scott for not asking me what I was talking about with the
thinner stuff supposedly being thicker... or... something....
Anyways, I use UNI-Thread. It's available in many colors (I have
black, brown, and tan) and sizes and comes in 200 yards, which
is more than enough. I get mine from www.fishusa.comAfter a few
more hours of rigging, with my fiancée tensely putting
the cat in the bathroom to keep something disastrous from happening
and repeatedly saying she'll be able to sleep again when this
process is over, I give a sigh of relief. Pre-Dreadnoughts like
the Mikasa had more in common with sailing ships than later ships
like the Yamato, so there's a lot of rigging to be done. These
ships carried sails "just in case" and were rigged
accordingly. Pre-Dreadnoughts don't have as much rigging as earlier
ships, but they have much more than later ships. That's part
of their charm. A fully rigged Pre-Dread is a thing of beauty
as something that points to the past while looking ahead to the
future.
Hang the flags for that extra bit of pizzazz and you're all
set! The kit comes with straight flags or waving flags. I picked
the waving flags. They're printed on adhesive paper and you're
supposed to just wrap them around the mast and flag pole. Of
course, this is pretty unrealistic, so I folded the flags over,
cut off the additional area that would have gone around the pole,
bent them to a waving shape, and them put on some dull coat.
After the dull coat dried, I hung them up on the rigging. The
kit even includes Admiral Togo's famous "Z Flag". This
was a flag that made the Nelson-like statement, "The fate
of Imperial Japan hangs on this one battle; all hands will exert
themselves and do their best." This same flag was flown
on the Akagi just before the attack on Pearl Harbor...
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Conclusions:
As I said at
the meeting, I have a real love-hate relationship with this kit.
The kit parts all go together wonderfully and kudos to Hasegawa
for bringing this subject out in 1/350 in plastic. But consider
how much money and tedious work has to be done to bring it up
to show quality (I spent over 100 hours on it) and the kit begins
to lose its shine. Bear in mind, we're not talking about some
20 year old model that only costs $20. This is a model that came
out less than two years ago by a company with the latest technology,
and for a price approaching $100. Even with the extras, I expect
better engineering for my buck. Especially when you take into
account that Zvesda's model of the Mikasa's nemesis at Tsushima,
the Knyaz Sovorov, is a better kit overall and only costs $30...
And yet, despite
these complaints, when I sit there and look at my finished
model of this feisty little battleship that led Japan to
victory over Russia, I can't help but say, "Ah, it was
worth it!"For more information on the naval battles
of the Russo-Japanese War, watch my animated documentary
located at http://www.historywithdade.comFor
photos of my finished kit (including a shot of the front
deck masked), go to:
http://homepage.mac.com/karybdis/gallery/PhotoAlbum41.html
Click on the Mikasa thumbnails.
You can also see more
pictures on Steel
Navy's website. |
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