When I saw Frank (bughunters) Nieuport 17 built my mouth started to water. I especially liked his use of real wood when making the struts and the tail skid.
Not even realizing what I did my hands took one of the Special Hobby boxings of the Nieuport 11 out of the stash and started to cut some parts from the sprues. Here you see what happened:

The kit is awesome -- besides of the engine. The resin engine has absolutely nothing to do with an 80hp LeRhone. Some months ago I had purchased a resin kit of the 80hp LeRhone via ebay. I have forgotten the name of the manufacturer. It came in a simple plastig bag without any instructions or anything else. But after assembling the engine I wouldn't name the producer anyway even if I could remember him, as it's simply a resin copy of the WNW Le Rhone. I don't think I go too far when I doubt that its a legal copy...

Pirated or not, THAT's a 80hp Le Rhone and it fits perfectly under the cowling. It just needs some more detailing... and replacing the small parts that were broken in the bag.
I decided not to use the Special Hobby cowling because after studying my photo references it seems like it is more a Nieuport 16 cowling and the Nieuport 11s had one that covered more of the engine. I borrowed the two-part cowling from an A-Model Nieuport 16 (which seems to be the propper one for my Nieport 11) and will replace it with the SH cowling.
I also build a new seat from plastic sheet and added a putty cushion.

And I started detailing the wheels

The fuselage sides were rigged and painted (paint removed at the front as it's a tight fit to close the fuselages):


As it is not my first early Nieuport I had naively thought I knew enough about these machines. But already the cockpit inteior prooved me wrong. Special Hobby offers a clock-like device for the left fuselage side (unlainted resin). But the photos in the WDF Special volume one show a pulsometer on this place. But was this the case only for British Nieuports and the clock-like device from SH is right for French planes?
Besides of that I am still thinking about the color sheme. At the beginning I was thinking about N1222 flown by Raymond Lis at the Verdun front in April 1916 from Lemmes aerodrome:

There are better pics that show the personal marking, but I sadly have no idea how this machine was painted. as its number is 1222 it cannot be CDL, this bird is too late for that, although its edges look like horizon blue tape which was used on CDL Nieuports. N1222 iis obviously painted in a solid color - creme like Chapmans N1148? Or aluminium like N1109?
What do you think?
There is another Nieuport from N65 that I really like:

It's personal marking seems to have been a cat waiting before a birdcage hanging from the moon. Cute!
https://forum.pages14-18.com/viewtopic.php?f=30&t=49758&start=0But sadly I don't know it's number, because the rudder is not visible...
hm, well, enough time to tink and rethink the color question...

Best regars
Borsos