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DirtModeler

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Posts posted by DirtModeler

  1. Try this.. overhead transparency film.. and rit dye.. hot water to nearly boiling. it's about .005" thick.

    I'm pretty sure it will work.. so much so that i'm going to buy some black dye tonight because i have a tinting job i need as well.. from what i've read transparancy film is a different kind of plastic that can absorb the dye.. unlike lexan or something like that.

    I'll find out for certain by the end of the weekend. It's kind of funny this thread popped up, because i've been waiting for the day to get over so i can get to the store and get some black rit dye for my project! (i already have the transparancy film..i use it a lot)

  2. I think

    I've been away this week so I thought I'd comment on the last few posts...

    I agree with JB that clubs that put out a Tuner/Sport class one year, with no advance notice, and then proclaim it 'didn't work' when nobody knew about it in the first place. They never gave it a chance. Maybe there were guys who saw it and brought models the second year, only to find the category gone. In best practice, they would have partnered with interested parties ahead of time to assure that there would be models in the category. Once you have a little flame, it can grow into a fire!

    I also agree with your comments on judges (or the modeling public) making snide remarks about models based on subject matter. Heck, judges need to be on their best behavior to appear impartial and represent the show / club, but we all know there's folks who just don't know how to act in public. In my early days of entering contests, late 1980s-early 1990s, I caught plenty of flack for building mind stretching subjects like a '32 Ford with a VW chassis under it, and gasp! junkers and beaters. I had judges make those snide remarks to my face. Things like they 'disqualified - didn't even judge' my '32 Ford because "it was disrespectful to Ford"! Never mind that it was probably the cleanest build in their Street Rod category. I once had a judge tell me my '59 Chevy convertible beater was "a waste of a kit". So I put these cars away. About 10 years later a buddy-0-mine urged me to bring the '59 out again. I showed it that season and won something at every show! Minds had expanded quite a bit in those 10 years. Today I tell this story about these two models and people don't even believe it. But the thinking was that narrow 25 years ago.

    And about judges... one of the big gaps in our hobby is that we don't have any overseeing board that sets judging standards, qualifies judges etc. Every show is a c-rap shoot, sometimes the same show year to year. With no qualifications, often judges are just club members who got roped into it, the guy with the enormous ego, or even attendees they've grabbed at the last minute. I got out of competing a long time ago since it really didn't mean anything. Other hobbies (Antique cars -AACA, Stamp collecting - APS) have national / international standards and judges who have apprenticed for years before being allowed to judge. For instance, I used to display a stamp research project, and I could go to any show anywhere and my points range would be near the same. I would earn a silver award, didn't matter if it was New York City or San Francisco.

    But back to the subject at hand. Yes, there are tons of younger modelers out there that we haven't invited into the family. I talk with a guy (who is one of us) who works part time in a hobby shop in NJ. He tells me that he gets plenty of young guys in the shop. He says they don't complain about price, they are happy to buy a Tamiya kit for $60 and then spend another $60 on supplies and Pegasus after market stuff. Too bad we haven't pulled them all into our hobby circuit, they are the future!

    I think we should take the judges out of it.. egos shouldn't be at play in these things.. give each person who walks in the door 5 tickets, and let them put them into the jar next to the 5 models they like the most.. most tickets win..

    I don't think 'technical excellence' or 'most authentic build' should matter.. if it looks cool.. it looks cool.. that should be what matters.. it shouldn't matter how you got there.

  3. I predominantly build them (along with whatever ELSE I seem to be interested in) but when I go to shows, I rarely see classes for them. I'm back in Ohio now so I'm within driving distance of many shows. Is is because they're not cared for as a genre? Like I said, Just curious. I'm interested in hearing your replies (in a respectful manner of course) B) Thank you. Antonio.

    I think it's shortsightedness and stubbornness.. it's a long tradition spanning generations.. comments on the subject are pretty much the exact same as they would be, no matter the decade.

    go to any decade.. the 1960's, 70's, 80's, whatever.. and you'll find 40 year olds grumbling at the stupid kids and their stupid hot rods.. proclaiming that their hot rods are far superior, and the younger kid's cars are a waste of time and money..

    i personally feel that dirt racing is taking a huge hit to its future because of the huge aversion to turners.. it has in essence cut off a whole generation of car enthusiasts from the sport.. since the 'stupid tuners' are just a waste time time and money..

    I don't much care of them, but i understand that in the grand scheme of things, tuners are just the modern hot rod that all the kids are interested in..

    30 years from now, the kids who are into tuners will all be talking about how all the stupid kids are wasting their time and money on their dumb electric cars, and that they should be spending more time working on the superior 4-cylinder tuners..

    it's the same thing, just repeated in a new way every decade.

  4. Hi Michael, this is looking interesting.

    By the way, I received the parts that I ordered. The parts are fantastic! Many thanks. 4 link and ladder bar braces, tabs and a few other things. I'll be back!

    Michael

    i'm sure glad you liked them.. making parts is kind of an odd thing because i honestly never know exactly how people will like and use them... it's always a sigh of relief when people enjoy the fiddly-bits that i put out and can put them to good use.

  5. Neat models! I don't know how anyone can work on something so small, 1/25 is my limit. Nice work.

    I sure appreciate it! but actually, the size being difficult is really just a problem with perspective. It honestly doesn't mean i'm a super modeler because i can work at that scale! :)

    i'll bet most people have smaller details and parts just in the engine of their 1:24th build then there are in this 1:64 car.. actually there are builds in 1:16th scale with smaller parts then this 1:64 car!

    The only difference is.. perspective. Take a distributor, the size of a distributor in 1:24 is about the same size as a wheel in 1:64. Now some people.. actually.. lots of people.. hand drill 8 holes in that little distributor and run plug wires through it.. an MSD decal on the side of that 1:24 distributor would be about the same size as a 'Hoosier' decal on that 1:64 tire.. The tiny photo-etched beadlock that goes onto that 1:64 wheel, is actually a lot larger then the 1:24th photo-etched Ford emblem that a lot of modelers put on their cars without any problem.

    It's all just a matter of perspective.. the parts themselves actually aren't any smaller, there are just fewer of them.

  6. HI Vernon,

    Kits will be $17.95.. I've been scratching and fighting to get them under $18 since their inception.

    I currently don't have any plans to offer decals. My hope is that other decal suppliers step up to offer some various lines of decals for these.

    The idea behind this whole line was to create a tool kit for modelers to create just about any dirt late model from the mid 1980's up to today.. The first wave is just these 4 cars. If they are well received, i'll continue on with another 4 different body styles, roof and nose options, etc.

    The possibilities are endless as long is there is ample demand to justify the setup costs and development time of additional kits.

  7. I just wanted to pipe in that i think it's cool everyone pooling together against a rip caster.

    I had a much different experience, which is why i've been silent on those who are copying my stuff.

    On a facebook group, someone had posted photos of my work and where he'd gotten it.. and someone posted "that's awesome!, i'm going to make resin copies of it!"... and the thread continued.. not a single person piping up and calling them out on it.. (i didn't say anything because i wanted to see where the thread would go)

    Low and behold a few weeks later, that same person loudly proclaiming they were going to copy my part.. has a freshly cast copy of it.. and now they are selling them.

    the thing that bums me out? Is that people heap on the compliments on the poorly cast copy being used, and few even mention the original that the copy was made from.

    It makes me wonder why i would ever want to invest that kind of time and money again to make something else that is just going to be copied and thrown aside?

    I don't really feel like being the R&D division for rip casters.

    It played a big part in me abandoning R&D for anything new in 1:24th that was castable.. and switching to full kits in 1:64 at a price point that even a rip caster would lose money on.

  8. I understand the frustration. I've seen re-pops of my stuff showing up too. I was initially pretty mad, but just came to terms with it. Resin casters come and go, most of the people who buy from people who sell re-pops are going to get ripped off sooner or later. A lot of these businesses fold when it stops being fun. If you take a risk at buying a knock-off from someone to save a few bucks, you have to accept the consequences when the stream of excuses as to why your order hasn't shipped for six months starts coming.

    People that are in the business for the long haul work hard to build a reputation as a solid and trusted entity. We give up our nights and weekends to make sure that orders are filled in a timely manner, and we don't sell what we don't have in stock. I would be leery of anyone who sells cast parts to order.

    Legal proceedings against a re-pop caster is a waste of time and money.

    Just ride on your reputation of trust and quality and time will sort out the rest.

    I wouldn't even post about the person re-popping your stuff.. it just drives traffic to them, and it's free advertising for them.

  9. I bet if one manufactures cell phones had 14 million recalls and they all had to be sent back to the factory to be reset.....that company would be out of business the next day........but consumers today are not a smart lot.

    Dad has a 1012 FLEX....top of the line. Only issue??? A squirrel ate some of his under hood insulation!!!

    It's all wheel drive with 22" wheels with twin turbo's.......The first time I drove it I was truly shocked......

    It was the best vehicle I had ever driven.

    A seven passenger plus luggage hot rod......wow!

    Those Flex's are super nice. Thought about one for myself.

    Your Subaru Crosstrek was built right here in my hometown, Lafayette, IN.

    Art

    Well I gotta hand it to Indiana Craftsman, they build a great car.

  10. You miss my point, govt. involvement means troubles. Look at our wonderful usps, another govt debacle.

    I don't really know why anyone would knock the USPS.

    I can tell you from a LOT of experience that it is an incredible organization.

    I have literally sent thousands of shipments via the USPS over the years, and i think MAYBE one of them was lost. Maybe one, i question it to this day... and the shipping cost of my box is $3.25.

    About a month ago, i had a package that needed to go out, and i happened to be at FedEX mailing some packages for the corporation i work for, and thought "hey, i'll just send it FedEX instead of driving to the Post Office". The same box that cost me $3.25 to mail First Class USPS, cost me... ~$12!! and it shipped ground.. even SLOWER then the USPS would have taken.

    I'll take the USPS any day of the week over FedEX, unless i need it there tomorrow.

  11. ^My neighbor has that same way of thinking... but weirdly he doesn't seem to mind the Kawasaki engine in his John Deere, or his Honda Rancher ATV, or the fact the Duramax diesel in his beloved GMC is an Isuzu design. I don't know if he knows his Impala was assembled in Canada...

    Personally, I don't care who built it, or where- I'm not going to waste my hard earned money on junk. And I don't believe in the "Just because it's made in America/Japan/Germany/Narnia that alone automaticallly makes it superior to all else" school of thought. It has more to do with the manufacturer's dedication to producing a quality product than the country of origin.

    Agreed. I drive a 2014 Subaru Crosstrek that I hear was built in Tennessee. And I love my subie.

    I have a ford truck too, but its just for hauling and dump runs now.

  12. Funny how all these problems have occurred since the govt got involved with them. Just sayin'.........

    I don't think the problems are new.. they are just under closer scrutiny now that the government is involved.

    The GM recall debocle and lawsuit due to deaths because they DIDN'T issue a recall is what is making them do all these recalls now.. otherwise it would have just been swept under the rug like it had been for who knows how long.

  13. I agree with the above posters. Building is a personal thing. If you race real cars you can drive a 4 cylinder mini stock, or a 8000 horsepower monster with carbon fiber and titanium everything. Go as far as You want to go. Dont worry about what other people use. A lot of the super detailed projects are a result of people slowly pushing their limits over a long period of time. We all started with a plastic kit, some orange tubes of testors glue and some square bottles of paint. The most satisfying feeling of a completed model is that when you are done, you feel like you did your best on that project.

  14. I haven't been that excited about Indycar racing since Greg Moore died.

    Indycars are exciting to watch (at least they were back when i saw them). Its much different then NASCAR, in NASCAR it is a game of inches, and passes happen slowly over time. in Indy racing one guy is 20 yards ahead of the other guy.. the next lap the guy is right on his tail, and the next lap he's passed him and is 20 yards ahead..

    I was a big Greg Moore fan, and I wasn't able to go to the Marlboro 500 that year in Fontana, California.. my dad went though and saw the wreck that killed him..

    I honestly have't really watched Indycars since.

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