Some progress has been made and here is the report:
I thought that the construction of the middle superstructure which contains the hangars would present fewer difficulties than that of the bridge. As it turned out, I had to tackle other kind of problems than previously, but hey, this is why our hobby is so enjoyable.
As a first step, all overhanging decks were duly thinned down. The importance of this cannot be overemphasized: it contributes greatly to the overall finesse of the model. The superstructure consists of two components, an upper and a lower part. Here they are in their original configuration:
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The problem with the lower part was that its front portion is open from the front and sides and covered by the upper part and contains elements that are inaccessible for painting once the two parts are attached. That is why I had to paint this area – a process I normally do after all of the individual components are finished. There is a structure on this continuation of the shelter deck with various (presumably boiler room) vents which were constructed using the Tetra photoetch set.
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There are two cable reels and some watertight doors which were duly reproduced and the deck hand painted AP507A, the vertical surfaces 507B (I know, there was no such thing, so think of it as a faded 507A – this is in my view in accordance with the photographs).
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There are two massive cylindrical supports of the pom-poms installed a deck higher, the upper part of which has a conical shape instead of the gussets suggested by the kit (this may be one of the numerous small differences between Valiant and QE). I glued numerous styrene triangles around the top end of the column,
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infilled the gaps with putty, then sanded the cone smooth.
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The surface is actually not completely smooth but it will be barely visible on the completed model. Another difference between the near-identical sister ships seems to be the support of the aircraft (and boat) handling crane which is a solid rectangle, not a column, as in QE. This was fashioned out of aluminium strip.
The upper part of the superstructure displays the usual problems of injection molded kits: low and wide splinter shields, excessive taper, soft details.
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All of these just had to go! I removed practically every detail from the deck,
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but then came the most intriguing task in this chapter of the build – the splinter shields are inclined outward by a variable degree around their perimeter – a feature that is really hard to reproduce while maintaining a constant height. I tried to solve this problem by taking templates from the splinter shields before removing them by drawing their outline with a pencil on a piece of masking tape attached to them.
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The templates were then attached to aluminium strip which was cut along the pencil lines. Even so, it was extremely demanding and took a lot of trial and error to achieve an acceptable result which is not as even as one would wish but, in my opinion looks with its supporting gussets way better than the original kit part.
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