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Posts posted by EngineerBob
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I also use liquid glues such as Bondene or Tamiya. I use styrene strips on the backside to aid alignment and to reinforce the joint. Take extra care with your cuts and make the seam fit as well as possible to provide the best possible glue surface. Use small pieces of styrene to fill any gaps. I also use sprue-goo in any remaining gaps or holes.
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I'd try spraying the dash with clear paint (w/ appropriate gloss) and placing the vents on the dash when paint is tacky.
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5 hours ago, PHPaul said:
Brand not terribly important, it's going into a kit-bash Willys pickup. Prefer a complete engine. Assembled or on the parts tree is fine. Gluebomb is good too, as long as it's reasonably complete and can be stripped and repainted. 1/25th scale.
I have three boxes full of various Willys parts and the complete dump body from the AMT DC-9964B Autocar dump truck to offer in trade.
Thanks for looking!
The Mobeus '53 Hudson Hornet kit has a nice straight 6.
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There are a lot of different putties available so, if you've had trouble sanding some, try a different putty that may be easier for you to work. A good product to use on a small divot such as yours is "sprue goo", liquid plastic cement mixed with small bits of chopped up plastic sprue. Being of the same material as your model body it will sand and finish the same once dry. Make sure you use sandpaper backed by a hard material so that you don't sand a bigger deppression into the roof.
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I've got wheels from the Monogram '30 Ford Coupe.
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I'd like to trade for the camper and/or the Testa Rosa when you decide what you need.
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18 hours ago, Tcoat said:
Perfect. So simple and effective!
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On 12/7/2022 at 11:37 AM, Tcoat said:
That is incredibly effective!
Thanks. It was very easy (and cheap). Everything except the wood beams was printed from images found using Google Image Search. Some very basic enlarging and cropping was done with MS Photo or Paint. Pics were spray glued to foam core board.
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I look forward to seeing what it looks like after you've placed all of your tools and materials. Looks like a lot of specific sized holes.
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Fantastic Kustom! The paint is perfection.
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The "Iron Butterfly" title caught my attention 'cuz I like that band. I also happen to like Viet Nam era gun trucks so I really enjoy your model. Looks great and I'm sure it will look even better weathered.
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13 hours ago, alan barton said:
Sensational. I have a black version from Hot Rod magazine on my to-do list. I will be coming back to this thread for clues!
Cheers
Alan
Thanks for the nice comments. Looking forward to seeing what someone else does with a Tbird kit.
Here are a couple of W.I.P. pics to show some of the changes I made to this kit. Cut out the molded-in seat and added driveshaft tunnel and floor; used old airplane horizontal stabilizer as fairing/rudder; cut molded in exhaust.
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Welcome back to the hobby. We can use more old-school kustoms on here!
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Great kit-bashing/customizing! The styling changes really work well to make it swoopy while still clearly being a 57 Tbird.
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I appreciate the nice comments. This was a fun build.
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Love the scratch building and kit bashing. Good looking finished model.
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I have an un-built 62 Tbird engine. Message sent.
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18 hours ago, Ace-Garageguy said:
Very nice. Reminiscent of the '57 Mercury Mermaid too.
Thanks All for the kind words. This was a fun one to modify. I had never heard of the Mercury Mermaid. You've got to love the ingenuity and experimentation back then.
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Hi All. I just finished my version of a supercharged 1957 Ford Thunderbird Land Speed Racecar. My version is inspired by Ford's Battlebird and modified for land speed trails at places like Bonneville and Muroc. The model is based on the AMT/ERTL kit. I created the front end from the back end of a '34 Ford fenders and roll-pan and scratch-built the tonneau cover. I scratch-built the McCullough supercharger from left over misc parts. I kept it simple by not detailing the molded chassis and even still used the metal axles. By the way, the vintage-style trailer is a modified race-boat trailer from a Bronco combo-kit. I hope this inspires more kit bashing and customizing. Enjoy.
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Top notch work integrating that roof onto the convertible body.
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WOW, that's got to be the most authentic looking weathering I've seen. Great job!
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I too grew up in SoCal in the 50's-60's, didn't make it to Lions but went often to Irwindale and OCIR. I loved the variety of cars and ingenuity of the local independent racers.
69 Nova "street race" drag car
in Drag Racing
Posted
Very nicely detailed! I especially liked the fuel lines as well as the shifter.