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Everything posted by mrm
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Maybe I didn't phrase my question properly. I fully understand the kits are completely different. The level of detail is of no concern to me. To make the 3D parts work, I will need to cut out the front and rear bumpers, the skirts and good portion of the rear fenders. My question was how the two kits' bodies compared as far as dimensions and proportions. Because, hypothetically if they are the same scale and representing the same car, they should be identical, save for the elements that I would be cutting off anyway. As far as options go, I can get the newest Revell Porsche from the Hobby Lobby which is literally next door to my current job site for something like $20 and start working on it tomorrow. While the situation with all other options is obviously much more complicated. Either way, thank you for the detailed answer. It looks like there is a 911 project in my future, which would be the third wide body Porsche out of three Porsche's ever attempted. A Fujimi Koenig Specials 928 And a Fujimi Koenig Specials 911 Turbo
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Not being very knowledgeable about Porsches, How does this kit differentiate from the Revell's kit of the same car? I have noticed that on the Revell kit it says it's 1/24 scale. So are tehy pretty much identical? Also the Tamiya kit is apparently curbside, while the Revell kit has opening engine compartment and full motor. The main reason I am asking these questions is because there is a really nice 3d file for a wide body kit, which was originally designed for the Tamiya kit and I am wondering if it would work on the Revell model of the same car.
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More waste of styrene with horrible box art.
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Absolutely every single F40 ever made has left the factory in Rosso Corsa, more commonly known as Ferrari red. The confusion on the subject comes from a number of cars that were delivered in other colors, basically yellow and black. The sultan of Brunei also received some right hand drive samples and one of them was grey with full leather interior and Testarossa seats. However, all of these cars were modified from the original red LHD originals, which was the only way the model was produced by the Ferrari factory. Kyosho, released the model also in yellow and did so before their red one. This particular model holds a special place in my collection as it was a present from my dad when he visited me from Europe back in 2007. I took him to the F1 USGP in Indianapolis and I believe the now defunct Exoticar were the first to offer the model in US and they premiered in their tent at that race. FERRARI F40 - Kyosho - 1/18
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Long time since I posted in this thread. I love the F40 too, which in my opinion still is king of all supercars. Not because of its performance, which has been bettered by dozens of cars by now, but in character. Anyway... Here is some F40 material specially for you. FERRARI F40 - KYOSHO - 1/18
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I have not updated this thread in a long time. Some more Purple Lamborghini... For its 30th Anniversary, Lamborghini presented a special version of the Diablo. It had different engine cover, side panels under the doors, front and rear bumpers and wheels. The engine was tuned up for more power and the interior received some minor upgrades. For the occasion Lamborghini released a new color, appropriately named "Purple 30th Anniversary" . Out of the limited edition of 150 pieces, the majority were painted in this unique purple metallic. However, a few were ordered in other colors. I have fond memories of a purple example, which I got to drive briefly when I worked at FC Kerbeck in NJ. So when AutoArt announced that they are releasing the model, I had to have it in the exact spec I had the privilege to experience. LAMBORGHINI DIABLO 30TH ANNIVERSARY - Viola 30th Ann - AutoArt 1/18
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Bitchin'!
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Honestly, at this point completely eliminating the rear seat would be a lot better option as it just looks silly. Most '32 sedans/Phaetons I've seen in real life that were either tubbed or extremely channeled or chopped, had their rear seats eliminated.
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Update! This weekend was kinda hectic, but I managed to pretty much build my whole interior. Save for some little details and touch ups it's pretty much finished. First, the biggest assembly - the door cards and package shelf, was all painted flat black. Well, actually it was painted SEM black, straight from the can. No primer or anything, as my experience is that SEM does not play nice with others. The newly created door inserts were covered with some very old 1/12 scale carbon fiber from Scale Motorsport. The pattern is way too large for the model and it is way too grey and over all not very good like their current offerings. I wanted to use it not as a carbon detail, but more as an upholstery pattern. I want this car to stay in the storm trooper theme character, without actually having any gimmicky Star Wars details on it, so this decals did the job perfect. The package tray also received some black flocking and now it is almost identical as the ones in various GT Ferraris, which is the other theme the car needs to follow in a subtle way. I love how everything was modified and sculpted, but looks totally stock. I printed some high tech, billet looking floor mounted pedals and a steering wheel that in my eye keeps the perfect balance between classic and modern with a touch of racing by way of an on-center strip at the top of the rim. The new floor looks pretty much unchanged, but it is very much modified, as it needed to be a totally new shape in order the accept the center tunnel from the Ferrari California, where the exhaust goes to the rear. The new pedal set was painted gloss black to imitate black anodized aluminum and the pedals surfaces received carbon, which is invisible in the pictures, let alone once in the footwell. The floor was flocked. I 3D printed a pair of nice seats and they were detailed by painting them Tamiya Rubber black with their centers painted with a custom very dark metallic grey, which was covered by clear flat for an almost black effect. The back panels were covered by 1/24 carbon fiber. Then the seat belt recepticles were painted gloss black and their buttons picked out in red. I am an avid supporter of the three pedal cars, no matter how exotic. Nothing like having the connection with the car like a good perfectly timed shift. A shifter was something missing from my Frankenstein of a dash. So for the purpose I cut the shifter portion from an old Testarossa center console I had in my parts box. The dash was painted SEM black to match the doors and the panels on each side of the center console housing the Lamborghini Aventadoor controls, were covered in the same old cf decals as the door inserts. The orientation matches, so now door panels flow into the dash. The center console sides are all covered with 1/24 carbon but you can't really tell. The two main instruments in the dash received Ferrari Enzo Rev and speedo dials as a nod to Star Wars tie fighters (they have two red dots under their windshields, where they shoot from) and Ferrari at the same time. All the old grey carbon was covered with flat clear to give a different texture. The shifter plate was sanded down, but still left to stick out, just like the boxes in vintage racing Ferraris. Some buttons on the dash were painted in simple red, blue, yellow and white in character with the cumbersome buttons seen in Star Wars scenes in the original films. Checking how everything fits together one last time... Everything checks out, so the steering was painted already glued to the steering column in Rubber black and then color detailed with aluminum metalizer and a white center stripe to match the body. The previous pictures showed some areas on the seats that needed to be touched up and also some other little details I didn't like on the dash and doors. Those were touched up, the angles on the seats adjusted and then everything got glued together. The only thing left now is the shifter, seatbelts and the sun visors, rear view mirror and interior light and the interior is complete. Now off to the chassis and body we go... Stay tuned and thanks for looking.
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'90 OBS Chevy, Early '90s style
mrm replied to Can-Con's topic in WIP: Model Trucks: Pickups, Vans, SUVs, Light Commercial
Very cool. I like your solution for the rather ugly stock side mirrors. -
It is actually some of the best steak you can ever have. When it is sliced up and served it looks just like that. I mean, after all it's just a muscle, likr any other steak. Just a lot more tender. I love the reactions of some people I have cooked it for. You cook it, you dress it you serve it and people ask what are we going to eat. And you tell them it's beef. They try it and without a fail praise it every time, telling me how it is the best beef they ever had. And then I tell them what part of the cow it came from and it is just crazy to see the reactions. All of a sudden they are not sure they like the texture. It smells kinda a different etc.. In reality its all in their head. We had good friends over one time and I made it for them. Same story. Once I told them, the husband was cool, but his wife looked at me and asked: "You wanna tell me I just made out with a cow?" We died laughing.
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Goodbye Hot Rod Magazine?
mrm replied to Rockford's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
I’m on board with everything you say. Couldn’t agree more. But it doesn’t change the fact that in the world we live in, paper magazines are an outdated nuisance. -
Beef tongue. Bought a whole beef tongue- about 4.5 pounds. Steamed it for about 4 hours. At that point peeling it required zero effort. Then sliced it thick and sautéed it in browned butter and sprinkled it with paprika, cayenne pepper and sea salt. With homemade garlic knots and home baked baguette to dip in the extra butter. Paired with Wild Turkey Rare Breed Rye. At 112.2 proof, that thing will put some hair on your chest.
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You may very well be right. But it was 30+ about 25 years ago. And it is more like 50+ now if not 60+. I am 48 and when I go to a show I am definitely at the lower end of the average age. Which basically means that the age of the average car modeler is the same as the age of the subject matter. And in my personal opinion that is a big issue. Because if it is not addressed, the hobby will die with us.
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I was just at Walmart, checking out if they had any cool new Hotwheels from their premium series. As an avid collector of 1/18 scale diecast models, the HW help me scratch my itch in between 1/18 purchases I really anticipate. So I get to the toys section and I see this woman in the unmistakable Walmart blue vest. At first I thought she was arranging the isle. Then I thought she was actually looking for something. A couple minutes on I could clearly tell she was just trying to look busy and was actually aimlessly touching stuff with no purpose. Then a really nice old lady approached her and asked a question I didn't hear. I didn't hear the answer either as I was minding my own business. Except for the word "spanish". I did however not only hear the older lady's reaction, but also saw the expression on her face. "What do you mean Spanish, don't you speak english?" - Noooo, me no english... The lady looked at me bewildered, as if asking for help or perhaps approval and asked again "You mean to tell me that you work here, but you don't speak english?" Looking at me again with a gaping mouth and this look in her eyes, which I am not sure if it was anger or confusion. "You got hired here and you can't even speak english..." repeated the old lady while waiving her hand in a "forget it, it's pointless" manner. No, the old lady was not what irked me!
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I specifically said born this century, meaning no older than 24. I didn’t know I would have to spell it out, but here it is: There goes another outdated mediocre kit of an old mediocre car that would be of zero interest to younger demographic and therefore do nothing to attract fresh blood to the hobby.
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I don’t know the exact answer or the solution, but then again, I don’t own a model company. But I was to start somewhere, I would try to see what got the current hard core modelers in the hobby and when did it happened. And then maybe try to convert it to the current generation. And I would definitely be targeting a little younger age group to introduce to the hobby. My kids built models with me. Even attended shows and entered contests. Won prizes and one of them even got his models in the magazines a couple of times. That was when he was still loosing teeth. And back then even, he thought the Beatnik Bandit II was cool, but the original one did nothing for him. And he built a purple corvette with a blower sticking through the hood on Alluma Coupe wheels/tires. Because I’ve had Vettes, his mom loves purple and he just thought that’s what looks cool, because these were the trends he saw at the local Good Guys show I took him to. He built the Boothill Express with me, because he thought the story of the real thing was fascinating and he just loved how unreal it looked. Then he moved to Fast and Furious Supra and then an Integra, because THAT’S what he dreamed to have in high school. Now he is into Porsches and more sophisticated cars, but he doesn’t built models anymore. When at HL he looks at the very well stocked isle and goes “Mehh… mid”. Which in today’s teenage lingo means that there is nothing interesting for him. I ask hi why he doesn’t build anymore, he says that there isn’t anything cool to build and when he builds something like the last model I got him - a cool tuned Mercedes Benz, he hates it at the show as he feels - and I quote: “ like it is a popularity contest for old people who know eachother and don’t appreciate anything other than ugly old cars that nobody cares about anymore.” Not my words. Just the perspective of a young kit, who is really good with his hands. I have a very open relationship with him and hang with his friends and him quite often and they have no problem talking about pretty much anything in front of me. From girls to party to cars to money, jobs and school to personal stuff. I am yet to hear any one of them or his brothers friends to ever say how they would love to have a Plymouth Duster, how cool would it be to slam a ‘60 Ford truck, that they dream of hooking up a Chevy Nova or how if they are rich they would be rollin’ in a Shelby Daytona. It’s all about Trucks, JDM and the bling supercars. I personally am not into trucks at all. But I think that it is absolutely ridiculous that the entire Truck/ SuV industry for the last 30 years is represented by a handful of models, while just as many variations, if not more have been made of just the ‘53 ford or a ‘55 Chevy. What’s the latest year Chevy truck made in 1/25 scale? I can build ‘30s Fords and ‘70s F1 cars for the rest of my days and die a happy man. But the reality is that for the car model building hobby (and the diecast industry) to survive, it will need to adapt to current trends, whatever they may be. Tamiya and Aoshima don’t make ‘70s Dodge Demons, but I don’t see them going bankrupt. Just like at the end of the 2000s Toyota and Audi were not the ones being bailed out by their countries tax payers. Maybe it is time to learn that progress can be a good thing.
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You are obviously missing the point. I never said I don’t like the car. And was definitely not born this century. But I would love to build a model with my kids and looking at what manufacturers are peddling, I can understand why my 15 year old would rather build Speed Champions Legos and Bandai Star Wars or Transformers figures.
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Somebody, please explain to me, why anybody born this century would ever have the desire to build this kit?
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What I meant by "new stuff" was new subject matter that can attract fresh blood. I have a 15year old and an 18 year old at home. And I am European and altho I've been "americanized" over the last 30 years I've been living here, I am still very much in touch and active on a lot of Euro platforms. And believe me, no teenager (or at least the very vast majority of them) gives two sheets for '60/'63 Ford pick ups. The reason why those kits like the '53 Ford trucks sell so well is because most of the hobby is comprised of people who grew up with cars from that era. Same demographic which is used to magazine subscriptions instead of instagram. And as much as I hate to say it, that group is on the exit stage not only of the hobby, but life in general. What my kids and their buddies consider an "antique car" nowadays and think is cool to "hot rod" - read make a stanced drift car, is a late '80s/early '90s Mercedes 190 or BMW e30 that they can buy for money saved over the summer. And the really cool one-off cars that we were drooling over like the Li'l Coffin, Ala Cart, Mysterion, Deora or Mongoose dragsters are now replaced by multi million dollar Paganis, Koenigseggs, Foose and Kindig creations associated with superstar personalities on social media and TV "reality" shows. Teenagers dream of owning or simply like Ford Raptors, Toyota FJs, convertible BMWs, AMG Benzes, LS swapped Miatas, Euro Exoticas and JDM hatchbacks in obnoxious colors with stickers on them. Whether we like it or not, if the hobby industry continues to completely ignore the need to attract newcomers to the hobby and caters only to the old geezers, myself included, it will die with them/us. Unfortunately a lot of people don't care if the hobby dies after they do and keep requesting ugly '60s grocery getters because that's what they got their first kiss in, back in high school in 1968.
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Very sharp build. I like the subtle clean look. If you don't mind me asking, what files did you use for the spark plug boots?
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What did you see on the road today?
mrm replied to Harry P.'s topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
I have a neighbor that has a Cybertruck NOT wrapped, but factory custom painted all white. Even the wheels. -
What drives me nuts is that manufacturers are actually rereleasing over and over the same old BLAH_BLAH_BLAH_BLAH in different versions, instead of actually offering something new and interesting to attract fresh blood to the hobby.