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peteski

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Everything posted by peteski

  1. Looks like the responses were based on the subject line of this thread. Hinge and wire bending tools are very different. I scratched my head some more and finally figured this out (I think). There are hinges and there are hinges. The tools described so far are for piano-type hinges which are made from flat metal comb shapes, which have to be bent around a wire. Seems that you are looking to make simple door/hood/trunk hinges out of wire and tubing, like what is described in a sticky thread:
  2. Yes, the search engine on this forum is not the greatest - that is why there is a sticky thread (actually in this section) on a better way to search it.
  3. It is not the sniping. It is simply the fact that others are willing to spend more money on the item than you do. They just do it in the last few seconds. If you were to put high enough of a bid on the item (eBay's proxy bidding process hides your maximum amount), then even the snipers would not be able to outbid you. I snipe and I don't always win (because of what I mentioned above - someone put in higher maximum bid few days earlier, and that amount stayed hidden until I placed my snipe bid). Seems that many eBay users don't understand how the bidding process works.
  4. Nice (trip down the memory lane). I also built one of those as a kid. I remember applying stickers (not decals) to it, and the blank message sheets where I used to create the messages by filling the dots with black and colored markers. Fun stuff. I also remember the noisy mechanism. These probably fetch some money on eBay nowadays.
  5. Mike, I just had a double take. You already have thread on this build (with replies). Or are you building 2 identical models?
  6. And in Europe the O (Oh) gauge is called 0 (zero) gauge. At least it has been from the time it was created. It is in USA where the zero was changed to letter Oh. Ot is a roughtly 1:43 scale. That is why HO scale means "half-oh" or "half-zero" scale (roughtly 1:87). Again in Europe it is called "half-zero" where in USA, it is "half-oh". 1:64 is "S" gauge. Here is a fairly thorough list of modeling scales https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_scale_model_sizes
  7. There is no single method guaranteed to work. As others have already mentioned, methods differ depending on adhesives used. Often combination of methods or tools have to be used. Sometimes no method will be 100% successful.
  8. I would think that since you were able to post this message, you have an account and are already logged in. ? Your profile shows that you signed up for your account right before you posted your message.
  9. LOL, as soon as I posted my message I suspected someone would come back with some 1:18 scale plastic kits. Actually, that is good to know, but as you mentioned, this seems more of a fad rather than a mainstream product.
  10. Because Americun modelers are fixated on 1:25 scale. Everything else is considered odd by many. While Tamiya does have a series of 1:20 open wheel racing cars, I believe that generally speaking 1:16 and 1:12 might be more popular automotive kit scales. Then there is 1:18 for automotive subjects. but not for plastic kits.
  11. While that is correct, I still say that turpentine is still not a preferred solvent (or a brush cleaning solution) for alcohol-based or water-based acrylics. It is best suited for oil based paints. Here is quote from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turpentine As a solvent, turpentine is used for thinning oil-based paints, for producing varnishes, and as a raw material for the chemical industry. Its use as a solvent in industrialized nations has largely been replaced by the much cheaper turpentine substitutes obtained from petroleum such as white spirit. A solution of turpentine and beeswax or carnauba wax has long been used as a furniture wax.
  12. White Spirit (Turpentine, or paint thinner) are petroleum based thinners which work very well with organic solvent based enamel paints (like Testors or Humbrol), but not as well with alcohol-based (or water-based) acrylic hobby paints like Tamiya. Alcohols or lacquer thinners (which contain polar solvents) are much better suited to Tamiya paints as a brush cleaner.
  13. Wow! I've never seen this kit. It is actually very cute! Are those price you quoted for sold kits, or asking prices with no takers?
  14. I think Lindberg made many very nice (non-automotive) model kits. I believe the gripes here are directed at their automotive models, especially in the odd scale they chose.
  15. Actually I enjoyed reading this thread from 2011, and how Bruno (who himself hasn't visited here since 21018) was having a 1-way conversation, answering his own questions. Almost as if we are missing some posts in between his questions.
  16. Just to clarify, by "cheap" lacquer thinner I mean a "regular" lacquer thinner, like the stuff you can by at a hardware store (or any shop which has a paint department). All generic lacquer thinners are basically a blend of solvents like acetone alcohols, and other solvents.I called it "cheap" because it is much much less expensive than any of the thinners made specifically for the hobby market and sold in small quantities. I guess that calling it "generic" instead of "cheap" would have been better choice of words.
  17. Nice red light bypass. Gained them about what, 10 seconds?
  18. In that situation you would need a dash camera which also takes rear view video.
  19. Why not just use inexpensive lacquer thinner for cleaning brushes? It will do as good (actually better) job as the X-20 thinner. There is absolutely no need to use either Tamiya or Mr. Hobby stuff.
  20. BS or not, even if the economy is booming that doesn't guarantee that every line of business will also be booming. It is not that simple.
  21. Looks great Mike! Nice to see another fellow Pocher builder. Interesting how similar our stories are. Around the same time you got yours, I bought the Mercedes (probably the one you missed). I mail ordered it from Hobby Expo after seeing their ads in FineScale Modeler about how realistic the Pocher models were. The most tedious part it was building 6 (yes, four plus 2 spares) wire wheels! While the spokes came as a V-shaped pair, each spoke has a tiny metal nipple that had to be installed. I still have that model in a glass display case. I was not a very experienced kit builder at the time. Funny seeing how my building skills have improved in those 35+ years. Looking at that model I would now do many things very differently. Here is a snapshot of my Mercedes 340AK Kabriolet (scanned from the original 35mm film photo 4X6). I should post my efforts too (I do have some WIP photos too.
  22. Believe me - I do. I specifically mentioned that in my post. I also agree about never having too much glare-free lighting. I'm not talking about the dental magnifier you are describing. That sounds like something 19th Century dentist would use. The ones I'm talking about look like eyeglasses with miniature telescopes embedded in the glasses. It gives a stereoscopic magnified view. Here is an example (for $1300). And here is my workbench. I have a magnifier lamp (which I mostly use for illumination, small goose neck halogen spot work light (which I can position at the most advantageous location for whatever I'm working on), on the right you see part of a boom holding a zoom stereo microscope (with its own ring light), for when I need a lot of magnification. My Optivisor hangs to the right (not visible in the photo). I didn't just buy all this equipment at once. I acquired it all over couple of decades. http://classicplastic.org/image/Pete-workshop-5.jpg
  23. There should still be several custom decal makers you might want to contact to see if they can do the job for you. There is a list available at https://robdebie.home.xs4all.nl/models/decals.htm#other You could also try https://fsdecals.com/ https://circusdecals.ecwid.com/ https://highballgraphics.com/index.php/custom-decals https://stsdecals.com/ Also in Canada https://www.pdc.ca/rr/custom_decals/ Some of those are geared towards model RR decals, but I don't see why they wouldn't print anything you want.
  24. Sometimes it makes sense not to be thrifty. I'm a huge Optivisor fan, and my hobby would not be the same without it. I tried mutiple low-price headband magnifiers, but they all stunk! So instead getting few model kits (or with today's prices not that many kits, and some paints) I would recommend saving the money and getting an Optivisor. Nowadays (as I aged) I usually wear my reading glasses under the Optivisor. relatively speaking, Optivisor is not out-of-reach expensive. The magnifiers dentist use can run $500 and up. They work great (my dentist let me try his on), but those are too spendy for me.
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