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Everything posted by Aaronw
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'58 Chevy Del Ray Rear Window
Aaronw replied to Bruce Poage's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
Evergreen has the clear plastic in several thicknesses, I think the thinest I have is 0.05" (really thin and pliable). Plastruct, Midwest and Superstyrene are other brand names of styrene sheet and strip supplies. Most model railroad shops will have one or more of these brands. -
That's pretty much how I've been looking at Johan, kind of like a resin caster, got to get the kits when you can. That would be great if Lindberg and Johan could work out something like the Model King has with the Revell and AMT kits.
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That is looking nice, I've passed on the kit a couple of times because its a low rider. I'll be watching to see how much work a conversion will be. Good choice on keeping the Galaxie kit as it was meant to be, that is a great kit, I just wish Galaxie would bring out something new.
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Alumilite has some nice how to's on their site. http://www.alumilite.com/ Alumilite has some starter kits that are not bad to start with. There are numerous suppliers for resin casting and each has their supporters and detractors. Alumilite, Micromark, and TAP plastic are a few I've used, I've been happy with the product and service from each, but TAP is my regular supplier. Also this is the right place to ask, there are several experienced casters that visit the site (but not me I'm an amatuer )
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It would be nice if somebody could get Okey to give an update here or at least to one of the model car magazines, kind of a from the horse mouth thing instead of the my friend's, uncle's cousin's aunt knows his mom's sister's neighbor's dog walker and she said... But anyway what I have gotten is Johan was in much worse shape than he knew when he bought it, and sales were not as brisk as he had hoped. On top of that there were some unfortunate incidents involving the re-issues. I'm always hoping that Johan's fate will improve but I'm not holding my breath. I'd love to see the '66 Cadillac ambulance available again and wish I'd bought more of the Fury's when they were available. I like that Desoto, are these kits styrene bodies with resin interiors or all resin?
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I know where I get my resin supplies they have a product that looks like that canned air you get for computers. It is some inert gas (nitrogen maybe?) that you shoot a little into your resin container just before you reseal it and it is supposed to make your resin last longer by displacing moisture and O2 in the container. I've never used it because I haven't had a problem with my resin going bad before I use it but it might be worth looking into.
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It's not just up to the resin casters, I'm sure if someone makes a master they can find a caster out there who would be happy to make a mold of it. I'm sure the compensation varies widely based on the caster, builder of the master and the value of the part. The nice thing with resin is you are almost always dealing with other modelers, often a single individual rather than a large company. Since its just one modeler talking with another the odds of finding one with a passion for a certain segment of the hobby is pretty good.
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For the most part yes, realistically the difference between 1/24 and 1/25 is smaller than the margin for error of many kits. a scale foot in 1/24 scale is 0.5" a scale inch in 1/24 is 0.0416" a scale foot in 1/25 is 0.48" a scale inch in 1/25 is .04"
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Yes it is fun to play one man apparatus commitee. I build some real apparatus (mostly US Forest Service stuff) but the made up stuff is fun too. I was planning on building the truck with the Ford bed, I'm also working on a Jeep J20 to go along with it, also with the stock bed. The fictional department I'm building is located on the N. California coast so brush trucks would be kind of an after thought, something is needed to take care of those small wildland fires in the redwoods but those fires rarely get big so they don't need anything fancy. Also the population is so scattered and sparse up there departments can't usually afford much beyond the basics. I am working on a tank, hose reel and pump unit to go in the back of both, a smaller (125-150 gallon) fiberglass poly tank for the 3/4 ton J20 and probably a steel tank for the Ford.
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You can get C channel too, the problem I've found is frames usually are not just straight, they have bends and such making it ossible but a ral pain to make a whole frame. I noticed AITM is selling resin truck frames now, I think I'll try one out the next time I order. It would be nice if someone would offer a chassis / running gear only kit. AMT would probably do well if they sold the Ford C or Ford Louisville that way, those kits seem to be very popular to use with resin cabs.
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Doesn't seem like it would be too hard to convert the bed back, filler on the door and I could put a tool box in the bed to cover the extra well. I have '53 and '56 kits so a step side is an option. I've built utility bodies but was looking at a simpler type of vehicle for this. One thing I was considering was bashing the dually kit with one of these which would give me a later Ford 4x4 and a 70's dually which I was thinking about doing as a Rescue. Out of curiosity what did the camper special offer? I'm guessing extra load capacity and the mentioned compartment for the spare tire. Sounds to me like useful features for a truck you are going to put 200 gallons of water in.
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I just got one of the MK Ford F350 kits and I noticed the bed seems to have a built in "secret compartment" on the passenger side of the bed similar to the '84 GMC ex Fall Guy pickup. Was this a popular option on these trucks or just something odd on the particular truck used to base the kit on like with the GMC kit? I'm just wondering, I'm going to build one of these as a brush truck for a rural fire district. If this was actually a factory option I'll leave it alone as I could see a fire department finding such a thing useful if it was fairly inexpensive, on the otherhand if it was a custom item it is unlikely a strapped for cash FD would pay for such a thing and I'll remove it. Thanks
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I always considered myself a total novice when it came to auto repair, I've done the easy stuff change the oil, air cleaner etc and have done a little more complex stuff like the brakes, replace the distributor, replaced shocks, rebuilt a carb, set the timing etc. Then I started talking to other people and found that many don't even know how to change a flat tire. It certainly made me feel better about my skills, I may need to follow along step by step in a book but at least I can do it (and know what the various thingies under the car are). My wife wanted to change her own shocks on her car, the guys at work were all shocked that I made my wife fix her car, they were stunned when I pointed out I didn't make her do it, she asked if I'd mind if she did it. As far as the original question, I like the snap kits. I have a 7 year old and we've built the occasional model together for the past couple years. The nice thing with the snap kits is he can do them with a little help (some of those parts need a lot of finger strength to get them to snap in place) but mostly they hold up to play which most glue models won't. As a 7 year old he isn't to enthused with put on a shelf look at me models he want something to play with. Luckily he does understand the difference between dad's models and his models.
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Revell Pete 359...any comments???
Aaronw replied to KT EASTMAN's topic in WIP: Model Trucks: Big Rigs and Heavy Equipment
I think the Revell 359 is supposed to be one of the better kits. I haven't built one though so don't have much to add regarding that, I'm sure Tim will be along to tell you everything you could ever want to know about the kit and truck. However if you are not picky about which IH you build I found the Paystar to be a nice kit, decent detail, good fit, not much flash and unlike most of the IH kits you can usually get it pretty cheap. Of course the Paystar is not what everyone considers a good looking truck but I like it. -
I know what you mean about the kit, I was pleasantly surprised. When I opened the box at first I was disappointed to find it looked like a snap kit, but then found that while simple the detail and fit are actually good. I think its funny though, I've been looking for this kit for a couple years and I finally found one in August. I've also never seen one built and two other people are building one as well.
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Geeez is everybody building this kit?
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Years of Peterbilt kits?
Aaronw replied to Aaronw's topic in WIP: Model Trucks: Big Rigs and Heavy Equipment
Thank you, that helps a lot. I didn't realize that headlights were an option (round or square) just thought they would change in one year like on cars. In the first photo is that an early truck or were single / twin lights an option? -
Future floor wax works well too, if they are just scuffs I usually find dipping the "glass" in Future gets rid of them. You might find this article useful. http://www.swannysmodels.com/TheCompleteFuture.html
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I know I've seen something covering this but I can't find it now. I was wondering what the approximate years the 359 Kits cover (the 1-1 trucks not when the kit came out). I am primarily interested in the AMT 359 and the Revell 359 snap kit but if someone wants to get into all the kits I'd certainly welcome that. I'm guessing the AMT kit is a 1985 or older since it has the round headlights and the Revell kit is an 86 or newer? Thanks
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AMT Chevy 3100 help needed
Aaronw replied to rollover's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
If its the AMT stock 3100 glue kit I can check the instructions when I get home tonight, I've been working on one myself. AMT made several versions of that truck, a stock snap kit, a stock glue kit and a custom kit.