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Daddy Mack

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Posts posted by Daddy Mack

  1. Hi Chief: If you want more clamping force you make the holddowns longer. LONG Aluminum holddowns  will not survive  very well. So you make the holddowns out of steel and then use little pieces of aluminum between the holddown and the workpiece.Ready-made steel holddowns are dirt cheap on eBay. If you clamping onto iron or steel, a pre 1984 copper penny is plenty soft for you needs. Brass is harder than copper. Avoid. Copper and aluminum readily deforms.That is what you want. Sandpaper in vise jaws helps traction. Don't get hurt! Shattering a hardened endmill will put your eye out.

  2. On 5/4/2019 at 10:48 AM, Dave Darby said:

    The Craftsman kit was derived from the promo tool (which never had an opening hood). The annual kit used a different tool that was updated to a 64. The injector manifold from the annual is in the most recent issue of the 64. 

    Ummmmmmmmmm. No

    There was NO annual 'tool' and a different Craftsman 'tool'. I have the annuals AND the Craftsman kits. They are the same body mold.

    I worked in a PIM shop. The only people who call molds 'tools' are lay people.

  3. On 5/2/2019 at 9:28 PM, Motor City said:

    This should have the engine-turned aluminum rear panel. 

    Someone needs to post a pic of a real 1963 Impala SS with an engine-turned aluminum rear panel. Or just a 1963 Impala engine-turned rear panel made out of ANY material. Please!

     

    On 5/2/2019 at 7:18 AM, Rob Hall said:

    The original annuals did, later issues haven't. 

    The Craftsman release has separate, clear red taillights.

    >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

    Whew.

    Somebody  reworked the rocker panels (or more) on the AMT body. That is shocking! That mold had been polished so many times that the bottom sides had more waves than the Atlantic Ocean.

    The mold inserts to run the separate hood were never found after they ran the Craftsman kit. That's why the reissues have a different hood than the annuals.

    Am almost tempted to buy one  just to see if they cut some new body sections (or more) to fix the sea storm along the rocker panels! :P

  4. Probably the majority of modelers are perfectionists, and that is fine. But it takes some confidence to post pictures of your little mistakes. I LOVE PEARL WHITE paint jobs. Okay, you made an unforced error on the hood decals but , that is still a respectable model and no matter what your critics say, that's a real nice job. :D

  5. 35 minutes ago, baycolony said:

    Yes, it is there and was part of the resin trans kit:

    AH! Thank You so much! Big Tank Midyear Corvettes are badass. In the same league as L89 427s (aluminum heads),  IMHO.

    The Big Tank, Tanker, Corvette NO3 Fuel Tank Option was available 1963-67 model years. Some ordered as race cars. Some ordered as long distance road/touring cars. TRULY a remarkable sports car. 36 gallons of High-Test leaded gasoline :D

    Less than 200 units TOTAL built in all 5 years!

     

  6. Then all i have left to say is: When the Print Properties box pops up after you click the Print Button, you click on the Properties tab and change the Color selection to Greyscale as someone else suggested. When printing B&W images, the danged printer usually makes a mess of things by attempting to blend edges with colored inks. Good Luck!

  7. 25 minutes ago, Ace-Garageguy said:

    You disagree?

    Confession Time:  I cannot help myself from being amused after i try something and have first-hand experience with it and then someone, who has never done it, comes along and says i cannot do what i already did.

    I'm working on a model car hood right now that is made of styrene plastic and i filled the hole with a piece of styrene from a model car roof that had a similar curvature. The first thing i sprayed onto it was Dupli-Color Self-Etching Primer. And i'm filling in the little pits and what-not with paint-brush dabs of the same primer. There was no reaction from the plastic by the application of wet Dupli-Color Self-Etching Primer. This is a pretty rare hood so i promise you, this is not the first time i have blown self-etching primer on bare styrene.

    I gave a clue in a previous reply in this thread. There is a reason why some acids are stored in glass containers and others in plastic.

  8. The basecoats i've been using have solvents that behave like lacquer thinner and they will attack model car plastic and certain paints. So ya, i seal. Been using Duplicolor self-etching primer and now Rustoleum makes it as well. Seems like you're supposed to wait an hour before topcoating it with basecoat and has to be done before 24 hours or else you have to sand the self-etching primer for adhesion. I have no experience with D-C Primer-Sealer.

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