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Posted

The BT52b will be my next project. It will be straight out of the box, as MFH kits doesn´t need any aftermarket items, except some paint to match the decals, whjch in my case are produced by Number Five paints.
The Brabham BT52 was a very radical development with minimal bodywork and maximum power, in fact, it was the most powerful Formula One car ever and could generate up to 1400 horsepower in qualifying setup. With only four cylinders and 1,5 liter displacement, the BT52 was not easy to drive with it´s huge turbo push.
In 1983 the BT52 and BT52b had some success with Nelson Piquet and Ricardo Patrese in the Cockpit and Piquet winning the driver championship in the last race in South Africa.

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The minimalistic missile like design, the blue and white livery and the relative low price for a MFH kit attracted me. It´s not one of their newer releases and I found some white metal parts bent and some resin parts a bit ill fitting. The metal is soft and can be easily bent back and the resin can be filed and sanded to fit, but I didn´t had these issues with my other MFH kits.

One example is shown here and if you build this kit, check it out early, as it will be hard to fix later. The cockpit tub receives two side fairings (shown below). You need to remove about 1mm, where the blue arrows point. There is a PE part to be added later, which is the perfect template, to show how much and where the resin needs to be removed.

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Other than that, the prep time, before you really start a MFH kit can be a bit patience testing. Checking if all the parts are there, cleaning the white metal parts in the tumble cleaner, spread them out to dry and sort them according to the parts list and manual into sorting boxes.

The first steps of this kit include some equally tedious tasks. There are dozens of holes to be drilled, to accept rivets, which have to be pushed through the carbon fiber decals. I hope this will work. The CF-decals need to be cut to fit from a supplied decal sheet using an also supplied paper template.

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Like with all kits, test fitting is essential, specially with MFH kits. You have to understand, how everything fits and intersects, to get it right. Here are the main body components, which show a good fit, at least after the above mentioned adjustments. The cockpit cover on the left (picture above) is a little warped, but I think it can be glued down with some clamps without heat treatment.

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Cheers Rob

  • Like 6
Posted
17 hours ago, Count0 said:

Heh, Thought you didn't like Turbo cars? I do. The Benetton Flame car is my Fav, but this one is up there too. 

Dead right, Count, but the BT52 has triggered some soft spots with me. First the missile like reduced design and second the sheer monstrosity of the engine.
Between you and me and the other five reading this post, my first 1/12 car build was a Renault RE20 Turbo :icon_eek:, but only because I liked the colors and I took it as a learning mule for large scale car builds.
Do you mean by Benetton flame car the B194 with the refueling fire incident? I also own this kit from MFH and considered building it instead of the BT52.

Cheers Rob 

  • Like 3
Posted
23 minutes ago, BlrwestSiR said:

One day I will actually start on a MFH kit from the stash (I have 4) but until I get the nerve up to do so, I'll keep watching you build yours.

Please do, Carl. It´s a pleasant detour from plastic kits, always a challenge, but rewarding as well.

Cheers Rob

  • Like 2
Posted
On 2/15/2026 at 1:50 AM, DocRob said:

Do you mean by Benetton flame car the B194 with the refueling fire incident?

No. I am a fan of Benetton in general, so I like all their cars. But this is the "flame" car

B 186

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Idk what Europeans called this, if anything other than 186, but here it's always referred to as the flame car because of the colored brush strokes. Which maybe looked like flames to someone? I don't see it, but "brush stroke" car sounds a little too suspect to have caught on.

Powered by a development of the same mighty BMW engine as the BT-50, but without the Gorden Murrey chassis.

  • Like 3
Posted

I want to have some of the daring steps out of the way and therefore started with the monocoque. After drilling all the holes for the rivets and necessary clean up, slight sanding, I washed the parts in soapy water and finally sprayed them with my trusty Tamiya LP-1 gloss black, to have a good base for the carbon fiber decals.

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One sheet of CF-decal is supplied along with a paper sheet as a template. I cut the copied paper sheet to the same size as the decal sheet and fixated them together with kabuki tape, to have no movement while cutting.

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Some hours later, I had all the pieces cut out with a fresh blade and a 3mm punch for the four small holes. The larger holes were cut by hand

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MFH kits from the pre Cartograph era have a protective clear foil over the decals, that´s why they are so reflective 

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And this is, how they should be applied. I have to say, I really love pre cut CF-decals a lot.

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Cheers Rob

  • Like 5

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