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bobss396

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Everything posted by bobss396

  1. I've used BMF in some cases where it doesn't show much.
  2. Ok, back to work on this gem. The engine just about fell out of it, so I'm making new mounts up. The exhaust was loose too. I had forgotten I prepped it for sneaker pipes, I have some 3D printed side pipes on order. I may omit the under car exhaust entirely. The trunk lid had a license plate recess, I moved that down to the rear valance. I blocked up the exhaust notches too. The body work is close to complete, I need to squirt more primer on it. I just washed the body. Paint is a Mopar touch up spray. Wheels will match the body color, I machined up some trim rings a while ago.
  3. More work on this one. I'm down to painting. I sanded off the side trim, also on the hood and added a center strip made from .040" half round. On the body I had a minor ghosting issue since I'm using a lacquer paint. I used a Mopar touch up paint I got on eBay. Much better than Duplicolor sprays.
  4. I buy the PPP ones on eBay. One vendor sells them with free shipping.
  5. I had a neat old board-track book years ago, with artist illustrations. Some tracks were quite large and the cars were far from slow. The wood planks would get damaged, racers had to avoid the holes. One driver talked about daredevil kids sticking their heads up from the bottom of the track through the holes.
  6. I follow this on the HAMB boards.
  7. I need to get one going, but it will have to be able to be stored in a banker's box, no bigger than 11" x 17". Maybe I'll start off small and see where it goes.
  8. This is how we built them as kids using heavy coat boxes. We either cut out 1 or 2 sides. Windows were cut out, frames made with construction paper. They were a lot of fun.
  9. I would definitely buy this body if I came across it.
  10. I made one using a smaller block of wood, I like to be able to turn it with one hand. Another I want to try will be using a hockey puck, real easy to turn that and it has mass to it.. won't tip over.
  11. This is the nail silk material I have. The pillars on my Ford stock car, I just used aluminum stock and CA glue since it does not have to look pretty.
  12. I like it. Is that a AMT '49 Merc trunk hinge?
  13. Even better.. get some fingernail wrap silks. Beauty supply and drug stores should have them. One side is sticky. You need sharp scissors to cut them, a knife just pulls the material. I use the embedded wire method. Single strand works best, brass wire .015" is good. I groove the busted pillar, embed the wire with CA glue and give it time to set up. Leave the ends really long. Prep the body, groove a channel on both ends and cut your "fiberglass" pieces. I like to tack the pillar in with a dab of CA glue, give that time to set. Place the little patches you have cut. Then soak them with CA glue. Any I have repaired have held up.
  14. I recall building a 1934 Ford pick up I got for my 9th birthday, on my bed. I had a pocket knife and an old pair of nail clippers with a file on them. We had 2 walking-distance kit sources. A stationary store that sold Palmer kits for 99 cents. The other was a bicycle shop that incidentally just closed under new ownership. That had roots in 1957 or so. The owner smoked cigars, ant kit you got reeked when we opened it. He was also a member of the Pagans motorcycle gang. He had TONS of kits. The old pink-gray annuals went for 99 cents each. $1.50 kits were $1.27, $2.00 kits were $1.77. Just about all of us in the 'hood built to some degree. I recall sitting outside with my brothers and friends at the picnic table for hours in the summer. Every cent we made doing chores went to feed the model car habit. One kid in my class stood head and shoulders above anybody else. By age 11, he could have beat some adults, he was that good. He had a can of leftover AMT metallic red paint he donated to my 1965 Pontiac build. I sprayed, he coached. That was in the day where we tried to see how many cars we got out of just one can. I have a couple of builds from 1969 to 1970... they were far from shiny.
  15. I worked with old timer sheet metal guys. One didn't know Trig, I offered to teach him. He preferred to make trial and error samples on scrap pieces. He also had a fear of calculators. "What if I enter a wrong number?". Accounting would give us old print-out books, we used the back side to draw and work math. This guy had rows and rows of figures.
  16. Back on the horse. The existing transmission tunnel was too small fir the engine set back. I made up some monstrosity tunnel that left little room for the seat. Since I have a ton of old NASCAR kits... why not? They are full of donor goodies. So this is it so far. I need to trim out the front of the interior tub and putty up a couple voids. And I did gut the dash.
  17. I have to take pictures of my '56 Ford I'm working on. The A and B pillars were broken, nothing missing. I reinforced them with thin aluminum strips and CA glue. In the past I have scribed channels in the post and roof. Then embedded wire with CA glue.
  18. One guy in the club used Blendr and likes it. I was turned onto Tinker CAD but didn't get far with it. I need a new PC, mine bit the dust.
  19. There was a cable TV show about Anderson, Driving Dirty. It was quite good. The track itself looked like a good place to race. I was over at Saugus Speedway in California in 1986 for the Southwest Tour, which was late models. They had the street stocks doubling as figure 8 cars, all they had to do were some adjustments and change tires.
  20. Exceptional work on the bed and boom. I like the bumper guard too. I made mine from a scratch. Might have 4 hours into that effort.
  21. I have built so many of these as a kid. They are fun kits to build.
  22. What tracks? I saw them mainly on Long Island. I'm not sure if they have to still run the 6. I saw some wicked fast ones in Florida, all V8 powered.
  23. No idea. I'm pulling this from a very dark place. I saw a lot of them over the decades. I have another in mind, more modern with a Vega or Nova body. Even the newer ones circa 1984 still used old Galaxie frames. They took some abuse.
  24. So, put a 300 cubic inch 6 cylinder into an old AMT kit.. it will be fun they said. The 3D printed transmission plus the set back I had to go with made a ton of work for me. I have to build a transmission tunnel, trim out the firewall after I get the mounts made up
  25. Added some shots of the rub rails, seat and belts. Rails are .093" tubing and pinned with .047" brass rod. Much stronger over using all plastic. Steering wheel was done, using the kit piece, with Tamiya TS 30 silver with Tamiya clear blue over it. Just about any parts store had metal flake steering wheels that were widely used. Bumpers are done, everything is pinned to help final assembly. I can start engine mounts shortly now that the engine basics are assembled.
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