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av405

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Everything posted by av405

  1. Thanks for the tip! I always have Purple Power on hand for paint stripping, so I find it easy to use to remove chrome as well. I'll stick with it as my go-to as it's worked for me for years. And yes, I always use gloves when handling it.
  2. I sanded the main body parts with 600 grit to give the primer something to bite and removed the flash and (most) seam marks from the smaller bodies. I'll be washing the parts in warm water and Dawn and giving them a scuff with a toothbrush shortly: Here are all the chrome parts in Purple Pond for de-chroming: Within 5 minutes, most of the chrome was gone! I've never seen it work this fast. I'll give it a little longer to be sure that all chrome remnants are removed:
  3. Of course. I love learning (and sharing) knowledge on this forum.
  4. My father has been a Highway Electrician for 36 years. I grew up going to job sites with him and was always impressed by the different trucks and pieces of machinery that he and his crews used. As a tribute of sorts, I want to build a low-trim pickup truck typical of what a foreman or other company supervisor would use. Given his long career, I have many different eras/options I can go with, but I figured this would be a good chance to finally build one of the many AMT 9th-gen F-150 truck kits that I have. This is what I'm aiming for, but in a construction yellow color: As I need a long bed, I went with the original 1992 issue kit which includes just that. I bought this particular kit off of ebay many years ago. It is complete and I thought the seller had opened it up and somehow cut the box top down the middle. But then I went down a rabbit hole with the price tag and discovered that it was most likely purchased like this at a Bud's Discount City store. For those that don't know, Bud's was a Walmart subsidiary that sold products handed down from regular Walmart stores that had been returned, damaged, phased out, etc. The last of these stores closed in 1998. The biggest challenge will be to de-trim the truck from an XLT to an XL model. Most of this work consists of removing the side trim. The brunt of this work was done with a fresh scalpel blade and some tape for protection, followed up with various sanding sticks and pads: After I was done, I sanded the affected areas with 400 grit to smooth the plastic down. I then brushed Plastruct liquid cement onto the areas that formerly had the side trim. The idea is that the liquid glue will get rid of the ghosting left behind by removing the side trim. This is a method I learned from Bill Guery and it has served me well in the past. I let things dry and then re-sanded with 400 and 600 grits. I applied primer to the sanded down areas so I could see my progress. This is where I'm at now:
  5. I wish I could make it, but I'm working due to cinco de mayo related shenanigans. Always a great show!
  6. I love that color! It's giving me an idea. Excellent work!
  7. I'm hoping for improvements/further variants of both the rounded line truck trucks (2WD would be sweet!) and the OBS trucks (bench seats please!).
  8. Do you have a link? Nothing comes up for me on FB.
  9. You're right, most of them seem to be a variant of that. Thanks!
  10. I think our best hopes are for Round2 to continue making improvements to their series of trucks, or for Revell to go all-in starting with the upcoming Stranger Things Blazer.
  11. Thank you, David. Thanks! Thanks! My new Iphone 15 has definitely made photography easier, especially with it's zoom features compared to my previous Iphone XS. I wish I could do better with lighting when taking photos.
  12. Thanks! It's very common to see these old trucks with some kind of bumper and/or rear window sticker.
  13. Thanks! Thanks! Your unboxing vid a few months ago in part drove me to get to working on this one. Thank you! Thank you, Alan! I appreciate the comment and it makes me happy when people recognize the details.
  14. Nice, can't wait to see it done. At least the AWD wheels will still be accurate for what you're going for.
  15. Thank you for the compliments!
  16. Here's my latest, a 1990-1991 Ford Taurus in Arizona Department of Public Safety livery. I used the Rescue 911 version of the kit as it comes with the correct 1990-1991 interior and has some good police car parts. I did some body work around the wheel wells to de-SHO the kit and turn it into a base model. The wheels (which have separate center caps), front and rear bumpers are 3D-printed pieces I had designed and printed by canuck3D model parts. @Wylde did an excellent job on these. He will be listing these parts on his website (https://wylde.ca/) in the next few weeks. Push bumper is scratch built, light bar is a Dave Panek piece, and decals are a combination of Inquarters and Chimneyville. Unfortunately the door decals on the DPS Tauruses were smaller than on other vehicles , so I trimmed what I had as best as I could to make them look the part.
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