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mr moto

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Everything posted by mr moto

  1. My favorite stripping method is Easy Lift Off. It's not instant but it's worked on everything I've tried it on and the fumes don't knock you over like the oven cleaners do. No damage to the plastic. Sold at LHS's and lots of places on the web.
  2. I just love a good tailfin!
  3. I still use Pactra (yes, you read that right!) flat white acrylic paint. I don't know how old that bottle is but it works every time! The first time I ever saw those new-fangled acrylic paints in the LHS I wondered if they would work on tires since I knew that enamels didn't. I bought some and haven't looked back. Here's some I did this past year with the same Pactra paint.
  4. mr moto

    '57 Corvette

    Beautiful build! That shade of green really sets off the early Vette. I can't imagine why nobody has hit on that before!
  5. That's brilliant! I don't know how in the world you ever thought of that!
  6. Here's a tire flattening technique that worked for me. First do it before you put them on the car or even the wheel. I found a wooden dowel that was a snug fit inside the tire and used it to keep the inside from changing shape. That way you can mount them on the wheels later. Then just hold the tire (using the dowel as handle) onto a hotplate or similar heat source until it's flat enough and mount it on the wheel when it cools. I've only done this once but it worked.
  7. Another product you'll need to become familiar with for chrome is Bare Metal Foil. It's purpose is different from Alclad and they're both essential. Bare Metal is generally used for chroming the trim pieces and scripts on the bodies but it can sometimes be used to completely cover small detail pieces as well. It's a very thin adhesive backed foil that is burnished down to the plastic and then trimmed with a very sharp #11 blade. And I would recommend that you use the one that is called "Chrome" not the "Ultra-bright Chrome". It's much easier to work with and I've never been able to tell the difference in brightness after it's on the model.
  8. That looks so real that I want to believe it's a model! I voted real anyway.
  9. Those look great! I'm not much of a resin caster myself. I ocassionally do a few small parts that I need for a particular project. That's enough experience with resin to know that casting something like those tires is WAY harder than it looks!
  10. I'm not familiar with that kit but I'm old enough to have bought from Auto World and I remember the grab bags! They were $1.00 added to your order. I decided to try one once expecting that I'd get a few decals or something but instead I got a complete 1/32 scale Revell Ferrari GTO slot car (easily worth over $100.00 mint now). I was blown away! In fact, I restored it and put in a new motor a couple of years ago. Anyway, from then on I always got the $1.00 grab bags and they were always awesome!
  11. I've moved in the direction of "no roll". It's just the practical thing to do and it doesn't affect how good they look when displayed at all. So far I haven't had any disasters with rolling wheels like some of the other guys but I've gotten close enough to see it coming!
  12. I have one of those, too. I believe it was in the Lindberg '34 Ford pickup kit - the version that can be built as a stake body or tow truck. It might be in both versions of the kit but I can't be sure.
  13. Very cool and original! That could even have been a pickup but I'll bet the back is full of sound gear.
  14. mr moto

    ARDUN ALTERED

    I love it! That looks straight from the yellowed, wrinkled pages of an old Hot Rod magazine.
  15. mr moto

    '66 Buick Custom

    Very nice!!! You really brought out the best in the original's lines!
  16. Welcome aboard! That is one sweet lookin' Chevy! The '59/'60 tailfins just blow me away.
  17. I've always had a weakness for the '61 Ford. Besides the overall shape I love that little detail where the chrome trim on the top of the fins forms a part of the door handles. BTW, the name Starliner only applied to the coupe. The convertible was called a Sunliner and the hardtop convertibles they made in '57, '58 and '59 were called Skyliners.
  18. Yesterday I received some photoetch items from Replicas & Miniatures of Maryland and they had a Fotocut logo on them. That's a pretty high recommendation!
  19. Okay, I give up! What's a road draft tube? You're doing beautiful work. It makes me want to build one or on the other hand maybe not! I think that kit is the only one that really captures the subtle form of the 1:1. The Aurora (later issued by Monogram) and Revell 1/25 kits both seem to miss it but in totally different ways!
  20. This one's driving me crazy! Overall it just looks like a model but when I study the details they say real. I guess I say it's a model.
  21. If you don't mind doing some extra work, Hendrix Resin (from Resin Realm) makes a '59 Ford four door that you could use for the roof. It might work. You would have to rescribe doorlines and other details like that.
  22. Bring it on! I've seen it and it's kool!
  23. WOW! Now there's a kit that marches to a different drummer!
  24. Incredible stuff! I'd be proud to have built any of them. Every one of them is award winning level work.
  25. Looks like a killer contest quality build to me! Great job so far!
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