(March – April 2024)

In 1981, the US Air Force initiated the Advanced Tactical Fighter (ATF) program to seek a next-generation fighter to replace the F-15 and better compete with the Russian SU-27 and MiG-29.  Requirements included low observability, short take-off and landing, and supercruise at Mach 1.4-1.5.  Initial proposals ranged from ugly, to odd, to Blackbirdy:

By 1986, Lockheed and Northrop were selected to develop demonstrators; Boeing and General Dynamics joined Lockheed, and McDonnell Douglas joined Northrop in this phase.  Well, we all know how this turned out: the US Air Force selected Lockheed’s YF-22, which would evolve into the successful F-22 Raptor.  But, Northrop’s proposal, the YF-23, was pretty badass also.  Across the internet one finds vocal YF-23 apologists, singing its praises and lamenting its undue loss to the YF-22.  Arguments typically proceed like, “well, sure, the F-22’s thrust vectoring made it more maneuverable, but this is an overhyped feature.  Much more important was the YF-23’s superior range and ceiling, which would be more relevant in modern air warfare engagements.”  For the record, the YF-23 was also faster and stealthier.

The YF-23 had some bold design features: diamond-shaped wings and a V-tail in place of separate horizontal and vertical stabilizers. The engine inlets were also flush with the fuselage, requiring special porous suction panels to remove the turbulent air of the boundary layer.  Together with a hint of forebody chines, these all come together to render a unique, sleek, and mysterious looking aircraft.

While today the two demonstrators are museum pieces, there are rumors that the Japanese might be in the  market for a stealthy 5th-generation fighter.  And Northrop might have just the plane for them.

The Kit

The 1/72-scale Testors YF-23 is a rebox of the 1991 Italeri release.  The only other tooling is from Dragon, also from 1991.  I purchased the Testors kit used on Ebay, and sadly the decals were water-damaged beyond salvage.  Some time later, I picked up the Dragon kit for my son: the decals include markings for both demonstrators: the Gray Ghost and the Spider, and so essentially supply two sets.  One of which my son graciously gifted me.  I decided to the build the Gray Ghost, because its darker paint scheme is a little unusual for US fighters.

With both kits in hand, a quick comparison reveals that the Testors/Italeri kit is generally superior: more detail, more accurate, more options (i.e. the bomb bay can be built open to reveal four missiles)

Testors kit on the left.

The Testors kit isn’t perfect, however.  First, the inlets appear to have covers just inside that are not optional.  To keep things open, I repositioned them to form a poor man’s S-duct and used some plasticard to seal the top.

The next problem one encounters is that the top and bottom clamshells don’t come together at the exhaust:

I considered clamping and heating the model to warp the plastic into form, but that seemed a little risky.  Instead, I cut some thin plasticard to shape and fit it in place,

For the record, the Dragon kit also suffers from this imperfection, making me wonder for a moment whether there actually is a gap there!

These two issues aside, construction was simple.  For paint I used Mr. Color 301 as a base coat finished with Testors Dull Coat (1st time I’ve used the stuff, btw. Worked great).  The engine exhausts are a mosaic of metal tiles with a variety of shades; I tried to recreate this with Alclad Aluminum, Steel, and Chrome with middling success.

Now the panel lines are actually raised on this model, but that’s fine for such a dark subject; photographs don’t reveal significant weathering along panel lines anyway.  What one notices instead is just a generally blotchy, dusty appearance over the body of the aircraft.  And the exhaust metals are a little weathered and fatigued.  Views of the underside of the Gray Ghost show some sparing oil/grime streaks.  So that’s the weathering plan.  Exhaust metals got some light gray oils, as did some areas of the fuselage.  Some sepia and starship bay sludge were used on the underside to recreate some light grime discoloration.  Lastly, I gave the entire model a dusting of gray and soot weathering pigments.

This is an easy build of a very interesting aircraft, and I recommend it for those interested in 5th-generation demonstrators that lost contracts to the YF-22.