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Everything posted by Russell C
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Over extended time, cardboard will dry out, any masking tape sealing up something will lose its adhesive eventually and turn to powder, and rubber bands will turn hard and fall apart, if you use any to wrap up something. Bottle paint will turn into bottles containing colored rocks. Say goodbye to the water & solvent content in stuff, basically.
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Let's see your geegaws!
Russell C replied to Lunajammer's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
The Revell Carrera RS also had a clipboard, with a flashlight molded into its surface, if I remember right. The AMT T police car had a long flashlight and a few other weapons and apparel. The Revell 32nd scale VW pickup had a 3-wheeled ATV. -
Felt sorry for this li'l guy: '50-'53 MG TD
Russell C replied to Russell C's topic in WIP: Model Cars
When being "back in the red" is a good thing. 409 cleaner made the silver & black paint brush-offable overnight but didn't make a dent in the white paint. Since my really old Easy-Off had evaporated to powder from years of neglect, I had to try a new yellow spray can version. It reduced the white to almost nothing in ten minutes or so. Friction-fit together here just for laughs. Next up will be how I fix the steering wheel, assuming that turns out ok. -
While I feel somewhat sorry for other people's ancient builds, I feel sorry for a few of my own, too. A decals wanted thread here at MCM prompted me to fish out another of my ancient history builds just to see how it was holding together in storage, and to see if it was salvageable for display again. Not too bad, had to pop a couple of pieces back on temporarily with Elmer's glue just so they'd stay put for the photos. I built it in late 1981, an effort to combine what I preferred from the Monogram Bison & General kits, with an excuse to indulge in my liking of double sleepers. From the Chevy, I chose its quarter fenders, capped straight stacks, air deflector & bumper (minus some lights), and I used the General's grille and headache rack. The 'tag-axle-in-the-air' appearance is not intentional, but is instead an indicator that my frame extension ended up not being all that happy over time. Fun exercise in a simple original paint design, but built with rather inexperienced teenage model building skills. I'd say it is worthy of some restoration / cleanup work: polishing out the orange peel, ditching the air deflector, blackwash for the grille, fixing / lengthening the frame a bit more, substituting some better wheels and tires, plus some other tweaks to punch up its appearance. Wouldn't take a whole lot to get it looking really nice and sharp.
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Good chance that all of us here are seriously demented. Fabulous work, and one more among the ways of wiring wheels. I've bookmarked your before 'n after photo as an inspiration for a Jo-Han '31 Cadillac idea I have rattling around in my head. That one seems like a nice kit, except for the wheels.
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Fun thing about this hobby for me is getting hit in the head with a tip like that. I've used pearl paints, but the faulty notion stuck in my mind was 'pastel-paint-for-license-plate-backgrounds', when of course in 1:1 scale they are not pastel, they're reflectory..... like pearl paint colors. D'oh!
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- True Scratch-building
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New to modeling and cant wait to learn
Russell C replied to BIG NICKY's topic in Welcome! Introduce Yourself
Welcome here, and this would be the place to acquire a seemingly infinite amount of tips and shortcuts for recreating scale replica stuff, along with attendance at any variety of large or small model contests. What I've seen over the years is that just about every modeler is approachable and more than willing to share such information, whether it's a person who only started building a couple of years ago to the guy who has two grand champion Best of Show awards under his belt. The other fun thing to discover is there is often more than one good way to achieve a scale model effect. For example, over in a thread about creating thin piping stripes for seat upholstery, I tossed in my tip, but read about another that I hadn't thought of and might end up using instead. -
Felt sorry for this li'l guy: '50-'53 MG TD
Russell C replied to Russell C's topic in WIP: Model Cars
Evil Andy knows I'm a slave to temptation regarding the running joke I have for the GSL contest's "Group" category. Could be done, should they choose this model, in a hokey tractor-like manner. Wish I'd saved a photo from an ebay listing I saw a couple of years ago where somebody did up a nice 1:1 kit car dragster version. Found a different 1:1 with just the standard Chevy V8: http://www.britishv8.org/MG/EdLaBrush-MG-TD.htm -
911 Turbo woody wagon, narrowed '39 Chevy panel roof and a bit of scrap plastic to 'square up' the back end. Cheated on the wood by cutting 'n pasting portions of a magazine photo of some guy's cherry wood bar onto this. The lighter wood trim is from a magazine photo, too. Also did a virtual mock-up of an Aston Martin shooting brake using my CorelDRAW program, but this is as far as I plan to go. If anyone wonders what could be done with the Tamiya Aston kit, here y'go.
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Felt sorry for this li'l guy: '50-'53 MG TD
Russell C replied to Russell C's topic in WIP: Model Cars
So far, the silver on the radiator/headlights and the black on the convertible top cover soften up overnight soaked in 409 cleaner, and scrub right off with a toothbrush. A quick Google image search for Gowland & Gowland MG TD confirms this is not one of those, while a UK site I found does seem to confirm what John says above about this being an Aurora kit (we have to ignore the box art, the model is a right-hand drive...... unless there were British and American versions). But what that site says about the thing having real rubber tires is I believe an error. While the tires are a tad softer than the red plastic, they also have die punch marks on the backs, so I'm thinking they are vinyl. -
The '89 Turbo coupe I fell in love with at the Porsche dealership I drove by every day was a deep metallic blue/gray or gray/blue, depending on how the lighting was outside. For http://www.modelcarsmag.com/forums/uploads/post-12144-0-51293100-1373871875.jpg, I at least wanted to get as close to scale size metalflake as possible, so I settled for one of the Testors gunmetal metalizer airbrush paints. Sometime later I discovered some nail polish pearl colors really look like 24th scale metalflake, so that's an option to consider.
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Saw it recently on ebay for less than $4, it looks like a 1:32 scale, no kit maker's markings on it anywhere, don't know a thing about it other than the seller said it was "built in the late 1950's or early 1960's". The inspiration for getting this is the late Albuquerque Model Car Club builder Rick Wright's old polished plastic box-stock beauties. This model's blemish-free plastic color just seems to beg for a really good shine-up, and a much better build execution. (photos by the ebay seller of it assembled) A Google image search of these helped me figure out why the seats looked weird, whoever built this put them in backwards. They have a single backrest and two seat cushions. With the dash, I've discovered the black paint quickly dissolves with 409 cleaner, but the white.... not so much. Haven't tried removing the silver paint yet. Unless someone convinces me to do otherwise, I'll put in a couple of corrections, one for the too-long wheelbase (shortening the space behind the doors) and the height of the grille (removing some of the bottom edge of the fenders to bring that inter-fender pan up and removing a horizontal section of the lower grille). A few more refinements such as headlights with reflectors & lenses, clear red taillights, new windshield, and a nice tan interior along with some other bits ought to turn this into a nice little gem. Looks like the kit maker got the grille too tall and the front fenders' inner curves to the frame too vertical, so this model ends up looking more like the earlier MG TC at the front. Can't fix the fenders without a ton of work, though, but I can probably get away with just the shorter grille. Reduced it to its elements here, the whitewall paint on the tires chipped off very easily. Really brittle glue, it all came apart without major difficulty.
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Irish. Or Irish.
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I'll drop by for the usual truncated visit. Care & feeding of my elderly parents tends to always occupy my weekends,
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I was alerted to the show by a relative after the bit aired, but I found the online version here: Antiques Roadshow, Detroit, Michigan | Hour 2 (after the obligatory advertisement, of course) Pull the time slider over to the 22 minute 55 second spot at the video link above, that's where the TV host goes over to the Ypsilanti Automotive Heritage Museum to see these models.
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Back in 1986, I traded/sold off nearly all of my leftover 25th scale truck stuff in exchange for a bit of cash and two kits: a Monogram Folgers Monte Carlo and the kit that's the basis of this model (brownie points to any who can identify the make & model + what the kit was). Don't ask me what prompted the 'hobby career' switch from sane model trucks to wacko model cars. I like to have some fun messing with people's minds, I guess. I'm more of a Ford NASCAR guy than a GM one, but the body lines of this one seemed to be a nice (although utterly impossible in reality) fit at the time. But "why stop there?", is what I thought, so I gathered up what I could find out of SAE 1:1 reference photos and did the best I could to replicate the wiring and other detailing found in Cup cars circa the mid '80s. And in a good effort to make this an accurate "inaccurate", I did a reasonable amount of research into what would be seen on a Cup version of this car, along with some bits on the optional in-car bulky camera, and the color scheme for the main sponsor decals. Yep, besides the base car being wrong, you'd never see that sponsor on an '80s car. The Rock Island railroad went bankrupt in 1977. And if I have it right, #14 was already a taken number by the Foyt team, but it is my favorite number, so tough beans. Plus, I always wanted to drive one of these, so there's my name on the upper doors. That Thermos jug next to the seat is painted in accurate colors, by the way. I own a '70s-era jug that looks exactly like that. The gearshift knob is painted to resemble a #14 pool ball. I forget if the number on it is a decal or if I had to paint it. All of the NASCAR bits on this came from the Monte Carlo, including the fender flares and of course the chassis, which happened not to need any adjustment of its wheelbase. The reflection under the model, by the way, is just what happens when I use the smoked glass pane from my coffee table on top of a piece of white poster board. One more added bit is the fuel overflow tube sticking out the back, the end piece of a Pentel pencil where the lead comes out. Within the sights of the in-car cameras in those days were decals on the dash of the driver's number and name, his primary sponsor, and the TV network. So, I couldn't resist creating paper 'decals' for the Public Broadcasting Network. Some heat stretched & shaped red sprue makes a reasonably realistic set of air ducts for the brakes. Four pipes on just one side of the engine indicates another major intentional inaccuracy, though. Yep, that's an Isuzu 4-cylinder in there (my dad lathe-turned the air cleaner out of aluminum for me). The problem with all those 1:1 reference photos I had, none had good views of the engines. But I did have perfect 24/7 views of the engine in my Chevy Luv pickup, so I used that as a reference to turn a scrap parts engine & tranny into an accurate replica. Who was going to stop me? Yep, I had fun with it, I still get a kick out of it. If you think this one is blasphemous, wait 'till you see the rest of the top fuel dragster I did as a lark for a special theme category at one of the old Arizona contests Tim Pentecost and the White Mountain Plastic Modelers used to have.
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Remember "Owner Operator magazine"
Russell C replied to Old Buckaroo's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
That got some rusty old unused gears turning in my mind, but the name still didn't sound right. Finally remembered it, it was Power Graphics Truck-Um-Up Posters, and a bit of searching turned up the original printer company and that guy's ebay store page where he sells reprints. -
Just kidding, actually, I prefer the direction you are going. And, "Foxer" beat me to the bit on embedding links. Though if you had a resin version available later, and if I had the time later, I can already envision the pickup version via a quick & dirty photo alteration using this guy's pic. Perspective is still a tad off, and I'd have to do something a bit better with the angle of the rear surface, but it gives the general idea, particularly the application of the 914 taillights.