Minicraft 1/144 MD-83
`McDonalds` Crossair
History
The former Swiss airline Crossair painted an MD-83 HB-IUH in a fancy scheme
in co-operation with Hotelplan, a Swiss tour operator and McDonalds. The scheme
was on this aircraft from March 1996 until it was removed in April 2000.
The Kit
Mincraft’s MD-80 was first released in 2000. It is in my opinion a wonderful
replica of the real aircraft. It was quite easy to build and had few faults.
I am not bothered if a kit is not 100% accurate, though I will try and fix errors
if they are managable. I can live with the rest. I will talk about the errors
I dealt with in the build report.

The
Build
There are no built in windows on this kit, but all the doors including those
for the baggage holds are engraved. I therefore filled in the passenger doors
so I could use decals later. The area where the fuselage windows should go is
outlined by a raised line which I sanded away.
After adding weight at the front, care of 1p coins I glued the fuselage halves
together, a good fit and then added the clear cockpit section. The fit here
is also pretty good, but nevertheless requires some putty and a good deal of
sanding to make all the join lines disappear. The cockpit windshield has raised
mouldings, so I sanded them back so the future decal would lie on a flat smooth
surface.
In the forums, it was mentioned that the airintake at the base of the fin didn’t
look quite right.
So I installed the barrel of an old tank kit in the opening, drilled it out,
then puttied around the edges. The result looked better than at the beginning.





Other minor problems mentioned in the forum, were that the model didn’t
sit properly with the nose facing slightly downwards. I thought I would try
and solve this problem by adding plastic card onto the undercarriage mounting
holes in the wing, therefore extending the length of the main gear and hopefully
getting the model to tip slightly forward. This went ok until it came to fitting
the leg. Then I found that the ring at the top of the leg now hit the back of
the undercarriage bay edge. So therefore I had to sand off the back of the ring
to get the leg to fit in the locating hole.

I
found that the flaptrack fairings under the wing had no locating holes which
made their alignment more difficult. My advise, glue part A35 first then line
up the rest on that one.
Other additions I made were my favourite wingtip lights out of perspex and ‘Kristal
Kleer’ added into the drilled out landing lights on the underside of the
wings at the end. Finally I made 2 ADF aerial mounds from plastic card which
I glued on top of the fuselage near the front.
The last extras were to build gravel deflectors for the undercarriage from plastic
card.
Painting & Decaling
I had a number of red paints in my collection and after testing them all out
on an old wing, I eventually decided on Humbrol 19 Gloss Red. The great thing
about this model is that it is red all over, so not so many paint changes! It
sprayed very nicely over a coat of grey Halfords Auto Primer.

The decals I used were from ‘Cousin Guido’ which I think is, or
was, something to do with Draw Decal. It was my first time using non screen
printed decals. Firstly I coated the whole sheet with a layer of Microscale
Decalcoat. The decals went on very well, every white decal being duplicated
to avoid colour bleeding through. I used the kit cockpit window decal and overwing
emergency walkways, the latter on the McDonalds sheet are the wrong shape. From
the Flying Colors MD80 detail sheet I used the windows, doors and grey tailplane
chaff plating. Each decal was carefully sealed with Johnsons Klear floorwax
. I found that the ‘M’ decal on the tail was a little too small
when compared to photos, as too were the ‘Crossair’ decals on the
engines. But it really does not detract from the quality of the decals or the
finished model. An additional decal was the ‘Qualifier Group’ sticker
which was on a white background near both front doors. This decal I found from
a Sabena sheet and was applied over a white square cut from white in the spares
box. This aircraft wore this sticker in the final years of this scheme.
Finally I did some minor weathering mainly around the engines and tailplane
using pastel powder. I added the aerials from plastic card and finally I glued
on the main gear doors which look far too long. I can’t work out why this
is so.




Conclusion
A very fun model to build with a very attractive livery. Highly recommended
MD80 kit. Unfortunately, through picking up the model the top white on some
of the ‘McDonalds’ letters flaked off. My fault, repairs are in
hand!

References
Airliners.net
Jetphotos.net
Airline Modeler Vol 5 No 4 (Kit review)
MD80 Walkaround
1000 Airlines in Colour G.Manning Airlife Press
Departure Gate 2000 Freddy Bullock Airlife Press
Dream Schemes Stuart Spicer Motorbooks
by
Andy White
Member Comments :
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comment by: ta152 posted on 11-21-2005
#1288
Very nice model, a very accurate work!
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comment by: Airbus One posted on 11-21-2005
#1289
A beautiful job. Well done!
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comment by: Andy White posted on 11-23-2005
#1298
Hi everyone
Thanks very much for your kind comments.
Take care
Andy
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comment by: Slow modeler posted on 11-26-2005
#1305
Andy,
Great article and a beautiful model. 
Juha
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comment by: selier posted on 12-01-2005
#1329
Andy,
Very nice work, and a great article.
Bert
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comment by: Andrew posted on 12-02-2005
#1331
Excellent Build Andy!
It's a very striking scheme.
Cheers
Andrew
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comment by: big baby posted on 03-30-2006
#1910
Did you scribe the wing detail lines? What do you use?
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comment by: Andy White posted on 04-15-2006
#1963
Hi big baby
All lines in the wing are as per kit, no extra scribing.
Andy
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