Jump to content
Model Cars Magazine Forum

Cosmo_Song

Members
  • Posts

    50
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Previous Fields

  • Are You Human?
    yes
  • Scale I Build
    1/25

Profile Information

  • Full Name
    Cosmo

Recent Profile Visitors

3,350 profile views

Cosmo_Song's Achievements

MCM Regular

MCM Regular (3/6)

  1. Trying to recreate a 1/25 version of the taxi in Driver: You Are the Wheelman. Started with Revell’s ‘76 Torino and extended the body, interior and chassis by 8mm to fit the wheelbase of the sedan version of Ford Torino.
  2. Thank you! Would be cool to get a Mercury from too many projects 3D printed bodies Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Glad it matches your memories Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! I used testor's root beer, very simple rattle can Thank you! Thank you! Glad it reminded you of a real one very similar Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Maybe when I figure out how to cast one haha Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! I found this set from ebay seller - hoppersbazaar The quality is superb!
  3. Finished as Nov.17th Many thanks to DoctorLarry's interior donor parts!
  4. Main modifications: Increased roof height and moved backward, increased length of A pillar Shortened rear wheel opening, copied shape as a resin piece and glued to replace front wheel opening Scratch-build front grille and taillights area Resin copied headlights from Johan Cutlass Clear orange and red acrylic sheet to mimic side signals with foil underneath Door handle copied from '76 Caprice with foil and super glue on the back More bodywork process can be seen here Starting point: AMT Lennie Pond Nascar
  5. A mainstream 70s Malibu converted from AMT Lennie Pond Nascar
  6. Amazing build! Where did you get those hubcaps?
  7. Hi, I'm interested in this kit. The forum showed "cargostar cannot receive messages." Could you send me a message? Thanks
  8. Amazing work and details! Where did you source the side mirrors? Were they 3D printed?
  9. Thank you! It was really some small areas of change but I think it's essential to make it look closer to an actual vehicle from the 70s. The bumper rubber was simply a vinyl tape strip, and I foiled a styrene strip and added a super think vinyl tape stripe to mimic the side trim.
  10. Thank you! Yes I really like these promo cars from the 70s but side mirrors were not common to be included until kits from the 80s. I'm so glad I was able to cast the mirrors from Greenlight's 1/24 Monaco cop car.
  11. Started with a MPC promo from eBay, I added the vinyl top, side trim, transparent signal lights with acrylic sheet and some chrome details. Also casted the side mirrors from a 1/24 Greenlight Monaco cop car diecast. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  12. Super cool build! Glad to see we are doing very different approach to a Gen3 Chevelle haha! Mine would be a mainstream grandma car
  13. Thank you! I'm planning to do a mainstream Lumina Classic
  14. In the meantime I'm looking for an interior that I can use, any suggestion for the bench seat and dashboard options?
  15. The rear wheel opening was also a little too long comparing to my reference photos, so I started with cutting from the middle of the rear wheel opening and moved it forward about 2mm. In the meantime I cut the A pillar from the bottom and made cut on the B pillar to adjust the roof angles, I moved the entire roof backward for 2mm and extended the A pillars. I could technically cut the fenders from another AMT Malibu body but I decided to try something different for replicating the body panels without damaging an existing body. I built a box with cardboard to cover the inside and outside of the rear panel area that I wanted to replicate, and sealed the curvy gaps with silly putty. Once the silicone mold was cured I poured resin into it and it came out quite good and maintained the same body panel thickness from the parent part. I will use the resin duplicate parts to implant into the front fender area. I marked the fenders on the line when the surface would bend to align with the main body and installed the duplicated resin parts with super glue + baking soda. Then I started to use Tamiya epoxy putty to merge the gaps and start forming the shapes all around the main body. The original tail panel was too short, I added 1mm styrene sheet on the bottom and scratch built the taillight and license plate opening areas. I used the Gray Mr. Hobby Mr Surfacer 1200 to check the body curvature consistency and now all the flaws became very noticeable. I'll continue work on smoothing out the main body.
×
×
  • Create New...