Hi Mate I know this video is a bit old now, I've bought one of these and it had the wrong instruction manual in it and cant get hold of anyone to sort the right one, any chance you could help?
If you are under 18 years old, have a parent or guardian read these instructions before you do anything because one of them needs to confirm this is good advice. Here is one way to see a portable document file (.pdf) of the instructions for Airfix Quick Build kit J6000 which is the Spitfire model shown in this video. Navigate to www.airfix.com/us-en/quick-build-spitfire.html A webpage appears. On that webpage find the Description section. At the bottom of the Description section, there is a square red button labeled DOWNLOAD BUILDING INSTRUCTIONS (PDF). From a laptop, click on that square. From a smartphone tap on that square. That red square is an object that contains a link to the pdf file of the instructions you want. Here is some trivia. Either device (laptop or smartphone) has the Adobe Acrobat Reader application (app) or a browser that will automatically display the drawings in the pdf file. There is a white symbol in the red square which is the letter "A" for Acrobat. I think the Macromedia company owns the Adobe brand. I think the Customer Service Department at the Hornby warehouse in your country would also send you the gloss paper colored instructions for free, if you wrote to the Hornby warehouse in your country or called them on the phone. Hornby owns the Airfix brand. Any small hobby store has somebody that could help you find the phone number and mailing address of the Hornby warehouse in your country. I do not work for any of the Macromedia brands or Hornby brands.
@@ieatoutoften872 Hi, thank you for taking the time to reply, the model shop I bought the kit from were very helpful and found their entire stock of spitfire models all had the instructions for the Red Arrow plane in the box rather than the correct ones. They got in touch with airfix and have now sent me the correct instruction leaflet. Thanks again for the help though
None of the quickbuilds are a specific scale. According to the Airfix website the Wingspan in (mm) is 270 or 10.63 inches. The actual wingspan of a WW2 spitfire is 36 feet and 10 inches. So the scale is approximately 1/41.5. Bigger than 1/48 scale. Hope this helps.
A great way for a youngster to get into model making - no glue, no paint, no mess.
My thoughts exactly.
Just Lego but better and smoother
And none of the annoying decals.
Youngster im 35 and brought one today unfortunately i don't have the best hand eye coordination so i certainly appreciate them
Do a panel wash on it, i did on the BF109 and it looks pretty decent.
My first model was this set
Hi Mate I know this video is a bit old now, I've bought one of these and it had the wrong instruction manual in it and cant get hold of anyone to sort the right one, any chance you could help?
If you are under 18 years old, have a parent or guardian read these instructions before you do anything because one of them needs to confirm this is good advice. Here is one way to see a portable document file (.pdf) of the instructions for Airfix Quick Build kit J6000 which is the Spitfire model shown in this video.
Navigate to
www.airfix.com/us-en/quick-build-spitfire.html
A webpage appears. On that webpage find the Description section. At the bottom of the Description section, there is a square red button labeled DOWNLOAD BUILDING INSTRUCTIONS (PDF). From a laptop, click on that square. From a smartphone tap on that square. That red square is an object that contains a link to the pdf file of the instructions you want.
Here is some trivia.
Either device (laptop or smartphone) has the Adobe Acrobat Reader application (app) or a browser that will automatically display the drawings in the pdf file. There is a white symbol in the red square which is the letter "A" for Acrobat. I think the Macromedia company owns the Adobe brand.
I think the Customer Service Department at the Hornby warehouse in your country would also send you the gloss paper colored instructions for free, if you wrote to the Hornby warehouse in your country or called them on the phone. Hornby owns the Airfix brand. Any small hobby store has somebody that could help you find the phone number and mailing address of the Hornby warehouse in your country. I do not work for any of the Macromedia brands or Hornby brands.
@@ieatoutoften872 Hi, thank you for taking the time to reply, the model shop I bought the kit from were very helpful and found their entire stock of spitfire models all had the instructions for the Red Arrow plane in the box rather than the correct ones. They got in touch with airfix and have now sent me the correct instruction leaflet. Thanks again for the help though
@@ieatoutoften872 nice one mate ✌
Oh cool.
My first quick build was a spitfire
What is this model scale or can you tell me this spitfires dimensions in centimeters.
The scale is 1/48 it's a medium sized model. Hope this helps
I had the same question. Thanks for the info!
I got this one
What is the scale of this? it seems bigger than 1/72. Is it 1/48?
None of the quickbuilds are a specific scale. According to the Airfix website the Wingspan in (mm) is 270 or 10.63 inches. The actual wingspan of a WW2 spitfire is 36 feet and 10 inches. So the scale is approximately 1/41.5. Bigger than 1/48 scale. Hope this helps.
The aerial behind the cockpit?
No, not included. This is just a fun little kit
Tan fácil y sencillo
👍
The stickers will come off due to the air gaps in the build
LEGO..?
More or less
AK 47 no it’s air fix they make model kits but they made a half LEGO half model
Dddkff