Hello everyone, and a very Happy New Year! 🎉
It's been ages since I last posted anything here. Honestly, it's been even longer since I tackled a WWI bird. But 2026 is kicking off with a proper Great War fighter, and I'm hoping it'll reignite my mojo for these quirky rigging nightmares.
A little while back, Mitko Mitkov (the mastermind behind mdesign) reached out and asked if I'd like to test-drive one of his new kits: either the Roland D.II or D.III. We struck a gentleman's agreement. I'll build it, review it honestly, and feed him all the nitpicky feedback so he can tweak future runs. Full disclosure: the kit was a gift, but this will be a no-sugarcoating build log. Promise!
I've known Mitko for years. He used to be in our local modeling club, he's a fellow WWI aviation nut, and he's a way bigger history nerd than I'll ever be. The guy has written several books on early Bulgarian and Balkan aviation (one of them is in the photo: "On the Wings of the Enemy". Cool title, right?). Super knowledgeable and a cracking good modeler to boot.
Okay, enough chit-chat. Let's get to the juicy stuff: the kit itself.
This is a full 3D-printed resin beauty in 1/48 scale. No decals for the main markings (but vinyl masks are included for the crosses and such), plus a tiny decal sheet for stencils. Instructions? Scan a QR code and squint at a PDF on your phone or tablet. No printed booklet, and no clear parts either. Just a 3D-printed template to cut your own windshield from whatever clear plastic you've got lying around.
Packaging is basic but bulletproof: a sturdy cardboard box stuffed to the gills, with smaller parts in their own little protective box. It's not fancy or Instagram pretty, but it gets the job done perfectly. Thumbs up.
This is my first ever full 3D-printed kit, so expect a mistake or two. My WWI skills are also a bit rusty, so fire away with tips, advice, or gentle roasting in the comments. I'm aiming for mostly out-of-box build, but if something screams for a quick tweak, I'll probably do it. Just for fun and a decent looking shark on the shelf.
First impressions: The fuselage comes in two halves, but not split lengthwise like normal. Instead, it's cut horizontally across. Smart move for hiding seams, but it makes superdetailing the cockpit a total pain. My solution? I'm not bothering. Problem solved! 😏
Interior detail is pretty basic. Plenty of room for the scratchbuilding heroes among you. But the exterior is insanely crisp: tiny inspection panels, delicate iron sights, a gorgeous engine... all so fine and fragile and yes, I already managed to ding something. Classic me!
Detail where it counts, and it looks stunning.


Let's dive in!
Step 1: Support removal hell
Open the box and you're greeted by a forest of supports. Not unexpected with 3D printing, but man, it's tedious. Carefully snip, file, and pray you don't obliterate that beautiful surface detail. I find it about as fun as cleaning flash off a short-run kit, but it's part of the hobby tax. A few supports left tiny pinholes, mostly on undersides or hidden spots, so a quick fill-and-sand session sorted them. No big drama.
Step 2: Dry-fitting, planning, and painting
The PDF instructions are okay, but could use more color callouts. Fit is insanely tight. Even snugger than Wingnut Wings. Dry-fit everything, but be very careful. Some parts are so delicate that forcing a test fit can damage them when pulling apart.
I painted the engine using refs from a WnW booklet, did the woodgrain with oils over acrylic base, and slapped color on the main cockpit bits. Then glued the fuselage halves, filled the seam with CA, sanded, repeat until smooth. That's where I am right now. Fuselage closed and looking pretty shark-like already.
As always, recommendations, tips, or constructive criticism super welcome. Let's make this a fun group build vibe. More updates soon! 🚀







