|
MisterCraft is releasing a Ghost of Kyiv kit. Don't get excited because it's an old lovely mold with raised panel lines and based on past experience terrible decal quality. It does have a great and realistic pilot figure though:
|
# ? Mar 29, 2022 18:09 |
|
|
# ? May 30, 2024 21:27 |
|
Wow, they really captured the likeness of the pilot and his seat in the instructions!
|
# ? Mar 29, 2022 18:14 |
|
MrUnderbridge posted:Wow, they really captured the likeness of the pilot and his seat in the instructions! He has a butt on his head.
|
# ? Mar 29, 2022 18:58 |
|
What color, speaking in terms of historical accuracy, was a Zero? Who cares? Tamiya 1/72 Zero 22, I think. Got away from me pretty much exactly once I hit the wash phase - paint just started to come off, the wash was staying where it shouldn't, I started to realize how boring the thing looks as a "clean" model, I start to realize how surprisingly 70s the whole thing looks, but hey, I tore myself away from Elden Ring long enough to start and finish a kit this month. If I had to do it over again, I'd give the black another highlight pass or two, and I think I'm going to have to try actual enamel washes at some point instead of futzing around with oils.
|
# ? Mar 30, 2022 04:19 |
|
SkunkDuster posted:Now that you have two of them, you can figure out what is wrong with the first one by swapping parts and seeing where the problem follows. I had to do that on a Badger 150 where the O-ring for the air valve was sliding out of the groove when I let air through, but would slide back into it's proper spot once the airflow stopped. When I disassembled it, everything looked exactly as it should. It wasn't until I swapped that part out with one from my other 150 that I narrowed it down to that loose O-ring. Thanks! I'm a bit nervous to try that because the new one is working so well. The trigger action is so much smoother. I had replaced the nozzle and packing screw on the old one, deep cleaned everything, adjusted the packing screw back and forth. I think I posted a bit about it, but it was very fiddly avoiding bubbles in the cup when pushing air but no paint with a finger over the "muzzle". I also had replaced the forward O-ring so I'm thinking the nozzle is having issues seating snugly to the body - further supported by a bit of chapstick between the two helping. I also suspect I have the packing screw way too tight. When I replaced it I tightened where there was just the slightest hint of resistance as the needle passed through, and after about 30 seconds of spraying Stynylrez I had paint all through the packing screw. I ended up with it so tight I need a significant amount of pressure to get the needle through. What I suspect is at some point I pulled a dirty needle out from the back on the original packing screw, damaged it, and then went from one extreme to the other with replacement. I did also notice that the new airbrush gave me some spotty grey primer laydown - idk the exact term, but when you basically have a visible, ugly buildup of wet paint on a part but the coverage is so uneven and poor you can still see through the coat. I'm running Stynylrez and vallejo air at 2-25 psi with a .35mm, so my core problem probably exists between the airbrush and the chair I'm sitting on, and I need to work on my airbrushing. Gewehr 43 posted:Doesn't Iwata offer a pretty reasonable overhaul service for their airbrushes? Might be worth looking into. That's also the impression I had, and I may do just this, but patience is not my strong suit thus the kinda-impulse buy. I could always try putting the old airbrush in the box and returning it because *reasons*. I'm kidding, I wouldn't seriously do this.
|
# ? Mar 30, 2022 04:22 |
|
grassy gnoll posted:Tamiya 1/72 Zero 22, I think. Got away from me pretty much exactly once I hit the wash phase - paint just started to come off, the wash was staying where it shouldn't, I started to realize how boring the thing looks as a "clean" model, I start to realize how surprisingly 70s the whole thing looks, but hey, I tore myself away from Elden Ring long enough to start and finish a kit this month. That's really great - looks like a 'What if a Zero took part in the Reno Air Races?'
|
# ? Mar 30, 2022 10:14 |
|
Vorenus posted:Thanks! I'm a bit nervous to try that because the new one is working so well. The trigger action is so much smoother. I had replaced the nozzle and packing screw on the old one, deep cleaned everything, adjusted the packing screw back and forth. I think I posted a bit about it, but it was very fiddly avoiding bubbles in the cup when pushing air but no paint with a finger over the "muzzle". I also had replaced the forward O-ring so I'm thinking the nozzle is having issues seating snugly to the body - further supported by a bit of chapstick between the two helping. What do you mean by "muzzle"? The tip? If you cover the tip, press the trigger to start air, and pull back, the air will go back into the paint reservoir because it has nowhere else to go. People do this intentionally sometimes to mix their paints in the color cup. Vorenus posted:I did also notice that the new airbrush gave me some spotty grey primer laydown - idk the exact term, but when you basically have a visible, ugly buildup of wet paint on a part but the coverage is so uneven and poor you can still see through the coat. I'm running Stynylrez and vallejo air at 2-25 psi with a .35mm, so my core problem probably exists between the airbrush and the chair I'm sitting on, and I need to work on my airbrushing. There are some folks out there who are able to work with Vallejo paints OK, but I'm definitely not one of them -- my suggestion would be to try different paints if you're trying to figure out airbrushing, but you need to be willing to cross the stink-divide and work with solvents. Mr. Finishing Surfacer 1500 with Mr. Color Leveling Thinner works ridiculously well as a primer, for example.
|
# ? Mar 30, 2022 15:57 |
|
grassy gnoll posted:
Uber-jealous of the panel lines on the white. Orange is good too. Did you do the silver as paint then mask, or mask the Orange and Black then paint silver?
|
# ? Mar 30, 2022 16:56 |
|
Thanks. The upper surfaces are actually the same white (light grey, really) as the underside. I painted first, then masked the stripes. The black fore end got painted first, with some crude masking over the original to protect the soon-to-be-orange areas, then vice versa. Definitely varnish before masking - even sticking and unsticking the Tamiya tape I was using, a huge chunk of the white on the left-hand wing came up straight to the plastic.
|
# ? Mar 30, 2022 17:55 |
|
MyronMulch posted:What do you mean by "muzzle"? The tip? If you cover the tip, press the trigger to start air, and pull back, the air will go back into the paint reservoir because it has nowhere else to go. People do this intentionally sometimes to mix their paints in the color cup. You can do it without pulling back, like I said air but no paint. It's a good way to check for obstructions.
|
# ? Mar 30, 2022 18:27 |
|
Vorenus posted:You can do it without pulling back, like I said air but no paint. It's a good way to check for obstructions. If I got air in the paint cup after blocking the tip and triggering air (but not pulling back for paint) I would assume that the needle is not seating properly in the nozzle, and thus offering a path for the air to travel back to the color cup.
|
# ? Mar 30, 2022 19:48 |
|
Hey Scale Modelling Thread! I am a lapsed Warhammer player now environmental educator and I'm fishing around for advice regarding water resistant model landscapes. What I'm aiming to make is a relatively simple model landscape that I can dust with dry substances to represent pollution, then spray the whole thing down with a gentle spray bottle so that kids can watch the water drain and carry all of the "pollution" off the edge of the model and into a clear plastic basin. I'm familiar with creating model battlefields, terrain, and working with scale tools but I have no idea how to go about protecting it such that it can hold up to dozens of wet demos every year. Obviously a lot of scale model pieces are plastic and will probably be just fine, but any tips for water proof landscape materials or sealants? Either google sucks now or this isn't a common concern outside of garden train sets.
|
# ? Mar 30, 2022 19:50 |
|
Riatsala posted:Hey Scale Modelling Thread! I am a lapsed Warhammer player now environmental educator and I'm fishing around for advice regarding water resistant model landscapes. What I'm aiming to make is a relatively simple model landscape that I can dust with dry substances to represent pollution, then spray the whole thing down with a gentle spray bottle so that kids can watch the water drain and carry all of the "pollution" off the edge of the model and into a clear plastic basin. I'm familiar with creating model battlefields, terrain, and working with scale tools but I have no idea how to go about protecting it such that it can hold up to dozens of wet demos every year. Using non-water soluble paints and glues would be my first go-to, but also a couple of final coats of spray varnish or sealant to help ensure that water isn't going to make something soggy. I don't know if I would use turf for the landscape as much as I would use texture paints (like the big jugs of paint infused with sand or coarser ballast from Liquitex, not the wee pots from Citadel) and then colour it accordingly for whatever kind of surface it is meant to replicate. In fact, I would mix colours or pigments into the texture paint while it is wet so it is not simply a surface that can be abraded. I'd still follow through with a few coats of spray varnish or sealant though, and include some kind of gutters or catchment around the base of the model to capture the runoff.
|
# ? Mar 30, 2022 20:07 |
|
Riatsala posted:Hey Scale Modelling Thread! I am a lapsed Warhammer player now environmental educator and I'm fishing around for advice regarding water resistant model landscapes. What I'm aiming to make is a relatively simple model landscape that I can dust with dry substances to represent pollution, then spray the whole thing down with a gentle spray bottle so that kids can watch the water drain and carry all of the "pollution" off the edge of the model and into a clear plastic basin. I'm familiar with creating model battlefields, terrain, and working with scale tools but I have no idea how to go about protecting it such that it can hold up to dozens of wet demos every year. Clear acrylic floor wax is crazy cheap and will seal everything in a waterproof protective layer. The 'Future' and 'Pledge' branded stuff has been a favourite of scale modelers for years. Brush it on, spray it on, thin it, tint it, whatever. Air dries like acrylic paint. If you want to take the shine off you can later hit it with some matte varnish. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lUgUIPQwxn4 It goes under several variations of name and label, but they always tend to be in a clear bottle with a squirt cap.
|
# ? Mar 31, 2022 10:50 |
|
I've heard it yellows eventually but depending on what you're making that could enhance the look
|
# ? Mar 31, 2022 14:23 |
|
Just coating the outside in PVA would do okay at protecting it from water.
|
# ? Mar 31, 2022 17:46 |
|
First attempt at a gear up aircraft: We gonna be applying putty. Revell F-104G.
|
# ? Mar 31, 2022 23:14 |
|
Finished a Cromwell tank. This is a new Airfix kit, and the newest kit I ever built (produced in 2021). Kit engineering definitely took a big step forward. It felt like old Tamiya kits where the parts go together very easily, but with crisp modern detail. Both rubber and link and length tracks were provided, I actually ended up using the rubber ones because they were quite good and the link and length ones didn't provide sag anyway. The kit comes with two decals (Polish and Czechoslovakian) and a wealth of gun and mantlet options, although the instructions only include the 95 mm close support variant. My only issue with the kit is that it doesn't come with any transparent parts at all. While it's not that hard to pour some transparent resin into the turret spotlight, none of the periscopes or headlights have any glass. I tried to repeat the resin trick with rather poor results. More photos: https://imgur.com/a/jOG8gEP
|
# ? Apr 1, 2022 23:01 |
|
Nice and sharp.
|
# ? Apr 2, 2022 00:19 |
|
Nobody should be able to make a Cromwell look that good. A few WIP shots of the M1: I foolishly assumed that since this kit has a fully modeled interior that it would be designed in such a way as to allow for ease of access to the interior after being fully built. I was wrong. I can easily fix that by snipping a few tiny bits off the underside of the turret rear, but the real trouble is getting the top of the turret on. Some vigorous sanding got the mantlet to be able to fit around the gun block, but something else is blocking the rear/right side from going flush with the bottom of the turret. I'm pretty sure it's one of the ammo racks but since I can't actually see inside to figure out what's going on it's been a trial and error process which is complicated by the whole deal being very fiddly. On the other hand, once I get it sorted I may just leave it sealed. I don't feel like there's a ton of paint/weathering detail to do inside a modern M1. I did use references to faithfully match the colors of each individual light/knob/switch on the gunner's station, but unless I get a fiber optic camera I can't actually show anyone.
|
# ? Apr 2, 2022 15:37 |
|
A wise man once asked me, if I don't realistically model the interior, how will the plastic mans fight the Nazis when my models come alive at night?
|
# ? Apr 2, 2022 22:18 |
|
I've been a car modeler for years but I've had a hankering for something a little different lately. Does anyone know if there are scale model kits for electric guitars and basses? I'm guessing probably not but drat it would be sooo cool because I love instruments as much as cars. It's probably something that would need to be 3D printed. Which is fine because while I would love to assemble a kit, I'm mainly interested in painting it. I don't have a 3D printer does anyone know of any 3D printing services?
|
# ? Apr 2, 2022 22:49 |
|
Charliegrs posted:I've been a car modeler for years but I've had a hankering for something a little different lately. Does anyone know if there are scale model kits for electric guitars and basses? I'm guessing probably not but drat it would be sooo cool because I love instruments as much as cars. Quick google search says they do exist. For example: https://store.axeheaven.com/products/fender-stratocaster-miniature-guitar-model-kit-build-your-own-officially-licensed Lego has a stratocaster kit if you are into Legos as well.
|
# ? Apr 2, 2022 23:23 |
|
Charliegrs posted:I've been a car modeler for years but I've had a hankering for something a little different lately. Does anyone know if there are scale model kits for electric guitars and basses? I'm guessing probably not but drat it would be sooo cool because I love instruments as much as cars. Shapeways is the big name in 3D print services. They have a giant library of models or you can send them your own file.
|
# ? Apr 3, 2022 00:45 |
|
Blue Footed Booby posted:A wise man once asked me, if I don't realistically model the interior, how will the plastic mans fight the Nazis when my models come alive at night? I was extra sure to paint my Cromwell's exhaust pipes even though they would go under a grille and then the Normandy Shroud. You can't even see the grille in the photos. Edit: speaking of needlessly complex things, my Miniart GAZ-AAA finally has its crew and I can put it away forever.
|
# ? Apr 3, 2022 02:39 |
|
JuffoWup posted:Quick google search says they do exist. For example: Oh man I googled a bit but didn't see that. That's exactly what I'm looking for thank you!
|
# ? Apr 3, 2022 06:55 |
|
You got a putty mouth Thankfully my girlfriend loves filing so she’s going to do that while she WFH this week. And yes, those are the wings. The entire wings.
|
# ? Apr 3, 2022 15:39 |
|
FrozenVent posted:And yes, those are the wings. The entire wings. That's why they call it "The Missile with a Man on it". Also known as "The Widowmaker" and "They Flying Coffin".
|
# ? Apr 3, 2022 16:00 |
|
Also the "Lawn Dart" The Century Series had some pretty funky designs, both the service aircraft, and the one prototypes and design studies not usually counted in the group NTRabbit fucked around with this message at 16:15 on Apr 3, 2022 |
# ? Apr 3, 2022 16:10 |
|
grassy gnoll posted:What color, speaking in terms of historical accuracy, was a Zero? Lovely job! did you just cut some tape for those curves?
|
# ? Apr 3, 2022 16:30 |
|
Charliegrs posted:I've been a car modeler for years but I've had a hankering for something a little different lately. Does anyone know if there are scale model kits for electric guitars and basses? I'm guessing probably not but drat it would be sooo cool because I love instruments as much as cars. I’m on mobile so no link but there’s a 3d printing thread where people off services.
|
# ? Apr 3, 2022 22:35 |
|
Nebakenezzer posted:Lovely job! did you just cut some tape for those curves? Thanks. Only around the tail - the rest is just that skinny white Tamiya tape. I think it's vinyl-backed instead of paper, so it's pretty flexible.
|
# ? Apr 4, 2022 00:07 |
|
Charliegrs posted:I've been a car modeler for years but I've had a hankering for something a little different lately. Does anyone know if there are scale model kits for electric guitars and basses? I'm guessing probably not but drat it would be sooo cool because I love instruments as much as cars. I've used Craft Cloud a few times in the past, and been very happy. It's more of an intermediary service, where you upload your model, and then it will automatically search a ton of 3D printing services to find the best price on getting the item printed. It's doubly great because they can also search printing services which don't normally have a forward facing public printing service and usually only deal with other businesses. Once you choose the service and options you want, Craft Cloud handles everything else with the chosen service, and you get your item fairly quickly. Well worth it instead of doing the comparison shopping yourself.
|
# ? Apr 4, 2022 00:29 |
|
Just a quick one off my work bench this week, Italeri's Bell H-13 Sioux in 1/72. It's a pretty straightforward build, and nice not to have to do any sanding/filling/rescribing on a fuselage for once. The lattice framing is a bit overscale but it looks alright to my eyes, although I've seen folk replace the whole lot with PE...
|
# ? Apr 9, 2022 13:13 |
|
tidal wave emulator posted:Just a quick one off my work bench this week, Italeri's Bell H-13 Sioux in 1/72. Looks good enough I started humming "Suicide Is Painless"
|
# ? Apr 9, 2022 14:24 |
|
Cthulu Carl posted:Looks good enough I started humming "Suicide Is Painless" Same, good photography work too.
|
# ? Apr 9, 2022 15:04 |
|
FrozenVent posted:Same, good photography work too. Thanks! I always have trouble taking photos with a white background as it washes all the colour out so I had to tinker with the levels a bit afterwards.
|
# ? Apr 9, 2022 15:25 |
|
Blue Footed Booby posted:A wise man once asked me, if I don't realistically model the interior, how will the plastic mans fight the Nazis when my models come alive at night? You should read "Conrads War" by Andrew Davies, he finds himself transported back to WWII, but forced to pilot the Lancaster he made when he was 10. One of the props won't spin because he used too much glue and the navigator is just a huge lump of plastic.
|
# ? Apr 9, 2022 20:06 |
|
Taking a break from oversized things to do smaller things. Bought in a few Bandai 1/1000 Yamato kits. Typical bandai quality, everything falls together, seems are really well thought out, just flawless engineering all round. In a way, it kind of takes the fun out of it a bit. Flight deck was the stuff of nightmares to paint, however, so there is that. Bandai 1/1000 DAOE-1 Asuka. Next up 1/1000 Dreadnaught and Ginga.
|
# ? Apr 10, 2022 13:10 |
|
|
# ? May 30, 2024 21:27 |
|
Looking super good though. From the pic, your paint work is really crisp and clean.
|
# ? Apr 10, 2022 22:05 |