We are back with another test. The long-awaited Curtiss H-16, opening the Murphs Models seaplane season. It is a complex model and will certainly require meticulous work in the construction and installation of the rigging.

The Curtiss H-16, one of the final descendants of the family of flying boats that began with the Curtiss "America." The H-16 was a definitive design when it entered service with the U.S. Navy and RAF in 1917. (Felixstowe F5) Over 300 of these big birds were produced to hunt German seaplanes and submarines. The H12/16 family served as the basis for many postwar designs, including the Japanese H1N1 flying boats and the F5 family designed by Curtiss at the very end of the Great War.

The model has 9 pages of parts, one of instructions and another with a biplane assembly jig, something that has accompanied Aaron's models for some time now.




The model is in Letter format and its original scale is 1/45, it has formers for the hull, detailed cockpit, control horns on the wing surfaces and extremely detailed liberty engines, which provides an interesting challenge, in addition to the construction itself which involves a boat with wings and a forest of struts and cables.
Updates coming soon.