Zoom Zoom
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I wonder if Gregg "It's Nice to be King" has his yet? I know they're just starting to get out to the magazines for review...
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I have all of those in the stash. I got them all back when Wal Mart had them in every store for $2.88 each. Your stack would have been $15.20 after tax
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Ditto. Same basic color scheme that I painted my Revell USA kit; Tamiya Mica red is almost a dead-on match for Ferrari's new F1 color and therefore offers builders a great shade of red that isn't just the old standard "resale red". I don't remember having any assembly issues aside from adjusting the front ride height by whittling down the plastic stub axles in front where they glue in. It's pretty straightforward. Revell's kit is better than Fujimi's. Also it's a nice basis for doing a full-detail Maranello using a Fujimi body.
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Considering the fact that there was quite an uproar at the time, and there has not been any uproar as of late, I'd say Revell must have fixed the problem. At some point someone said that Revell was looking into it. I've never had any problem w/the plastic, but I tend to use hobby paints and when I do shoot auto paint on models I take the necessary steps to prime and seal the plastic.
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Did you catch the chatter on Speed during the race where they said Luca di Montezemolo had stated that he'd very much like to see Ferrari compete in LMP1? If that isn't a big 4Q to the FIA and Bernie, nothing is. Not that Ferrari didn't completely dominate GT2, so they're already well into sports car racing and winning...and keeping Porsche on their toes. Good stuff. I can't wait to see how Corvette does in GT2. Sports car/prototype racing is likely going to benefit at the expense of F1's incessant rule-changing and excitement-choking madness bringing down that house of cards. I feel like Bruce Willis saying "Yippie ki yay, muddertruckers!"
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We do a lot of pre-race preparation that helps, we help each other, and we try to pick easy subjects to model! The reason I have no idea when Mike finished is because he was the only one awake at that time I got up at 5:30AM and shortly thereafter he took over the sleeping duties. That 370Z... It's a few hours from being finished. I was just showing it off since it's still unobtanium. To quote Gregg "It's nice to be king"
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Outstanding finish, even better considering what you started with
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Thanks! I did as much online research as possible; I found out about this car when I was shown a picture of the "White Whale" Ferrari that Fisher is making. Below that vintage racing photo was a picture of this car at LeMans, and I had already asked friends if they remembered any P4's that ran with a white livery. Turns out Model Factory Hiro did this car, there have been decals done for it in the past. The vast majority of pictures for this car are all of models, and they all have slightly different details. I know my model isn't 100% accurate, but neither is anyone else's model without a lot of work. The graphic scheme was easy to lay out and print, I was happy that the blue stripes came out nice from the laser printer in a color that seems right for the car; my NART logos for the sides came out w/a terrible yellow but I layered them over yellow decals that I cut from the donor kit decals and the color was perfect (laser decals are translucent, fine if you are building a white model). Most models show the car w/light blue stripes on the tires. I haven't figured out how best to do them, if at all. The decals I had for it were too dark. They might have been gold. I could do the stripes w/a white gel pen, but I didn't have my circle template w/me at the palooza. We'll see...I might do them, and I might do a panel line wash to the model as well now that I've had 24 hours to recover
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awright all you photoshop gurus out there..
Zoom Zoom replied to jeffb's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
Nope, there's no magic cheap software to do blueprint layouts, if there was I'd already be using it and looking for the cheap/easy 3D program to carve stuff out from computer files...still a few years down the road before feasible on a hobby basis. You can always scale your photographs or copies to make the rough cutout patterns. You can do them the old-school way using vellum paper and drafting pencils and circle templates and ship curves. That's how I've done the layouts for the various Hot Wheels cars I've worked on, a couple masters for resin (one '91 Crown Vic that was never finished, the MGB GT that I did for All American, the Toyota GTP car for BHP Enterprises). The computer is fast for a lot of things but drawing the complex lines of a car still seems easiest to me the old-school way (I can trace over a photo, whether on the drafting board or the computer). -
We enjoyed our annual LeMans palooza immensely This is my entry; I took a discounted (missing p/e fret) $18 Fujimi 330 P4 from Hobbytown and made it the 412P NART entry. The kit was molded in a very dense white, making painting a breeze. I did the decal art and printed it on a color laser printer. Started at 9:00AM yesterday (painted it outdoors w/Tamiya TS Pure White applied over primer, only needed buffing w/Tamiya compound), finished it up (mostly) by 1:00AM today, adding a few details like winglets and tire decals this morning before the race ended. Thankfully this kit was simple enough for a 24 hour build with few build issues. Mirrors are from my parts box, winglets were scratched from .015" styrene.
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W.I.P. Ferrari F430GT RISI LM07 *UPDATE*
Zoom Zoom replied to SCUDERIA-FERRARI's topic in WIP: Model Cars
This is Scuderia-Ferrari after finishing, doing his impression of a human burrito: -
Sorry, I didn't take photos all day long. I didn't get my camera out until about 8 AM this morning We had a blast as usual (good thing there weren't any open flames, with all the soda and junk food being consumed...) and 6 models were finished. One of those was a detail-intense Ferrari F430 GT that was started earlier. The rest were started (we allow primer before the race) at 9AM on Saturday when the race started on the east coast. Builders: yours truly, Ferrari 330 P4 NART; Henry Trent, Corvette C6R & Porsche 962; Wayne Webers, Alfa T33 1967 LeMans test vehicle; Mike Edwards, Ferrari F430 GT; Danny Edwards, Fisher Ferrari 512. Brian Venable DNF Ferrari 250 GT Sperimentale; Bob Cline DNF Ford GT40 (only joined us for part of Saturday). Next year I'm building "Lucybelle" 1958 Testa Rossa Models were mostly finished in order: Danny Edwards: Midnight Henry Trent: Midnight Bob Downie: 1AM Mike Edwards: Sometime between 1-5:30AM Wayne Webers: 8AM Henry Trent (model #2): 9AM/checkered flag. We allow a model to arrive in primer. Parts can be ready for paint. Fun is the most important aspect. Bright sunny weather outside helps as there's only one spray booth and 7 builders; I did all my painting outdoors, and the sun works as a good dehydrator (and we had four inside the garage running until after midnight). My work area; had wireless internet before the neighbor pulled the cord. Henry Trent working on his Porsche: Henry's C6R, Mike's F430GT, Henry's 962: Danny's yellow Ferrari, my white Ferrari, Wayne's Alfa: Wait. What's this doing here? It's not on sale until June 25th in Japan. Hmmmm... A well deserved rest after finishing first: Mike's imitation of a human burrito, after finishing/before the end of the race: All the finished models:
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Scale Auto Style is up for sale!!!
Zoom Zoom replied to Tonioseven's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
They had some great stuff; hope it ends up in good hands. -
Ding Ding Ding!!!! You are quite observant C'mon Harry....give everyone the news!!
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It's up my alley, I love the car and eventually I'll get the model. Looks great so far
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International LoneStar kit???
Zoom Zoom replied to ZIL 111V's topic in WIP: Model Trucks: Big Rigs and Heavy Equipment
I have yet to see one, I imagine I'll notice it right away when I do. I think it's a great looking truck. On another board frequented by a lot of fuddy-duddys the styling was panned mercilessly This would be a great subject for a kit, as models of new trucks are pretty rare. If they made a kit of it, I think I would probably buy it, and I'm not really a truck builder. If only a kit manufacturer would kit the truck from Duel.... -
Mine could use some new foam blocks, and I've scraped the buildup off a few times. I take terrible care of it, but it works like a champ.
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the dumping of the big tub
Zoom Zoom replied to jbwelda's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
I never, ever trust something will really get reissued (or issued in the first place) until I see it on the store shelf. There are probably a lot more original '66 Impalas showing up on Feebay these days as well. -
If they're just finger smudges then the finish compound will be fine. The only time I've had superglue fogging it was dry and powdery, and could simply be wiped off. If it's more permanent see if the compound on a Q tip removes it. Avoid kit plated chrome, as it's weak. I use an accelerator for my superglue now on every joint, and it keeps the fogging from occurring. Never a problem anymore...
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Tamiya compounds are best when used together and used on Tamiya sprays. If the fingerprints are embedded in the paint, you're never getting them out w/finishing compound alone, you will have to cut the paint and buff it traditionally...if there's enough paint. Having all three compounds is the best option for your toolbox. The finish is the least caustic, it's more to put on a final shine. I keep things as easy as possible, since I love using Tamiya compounds on Tamiya sprays, I'll clearcoat nearly anything with Tamiya TS13 clear, so that my wetsanding is kept to a minimum and I can then go to the Tamiya coarse, fine, and finish compounds. Saves an awful lot of time.
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Wetsand with 3200/3600/4000/6000, maybe 8K and 12K Micromesh (if it's a dark color), followed by liquid compound. If you use Tamiya sprays (which decant/airbrush nicely) you can often get away with murder, often just 4000 and then go right to their coarse, fine, and finish compounds which cut their own paint like magic.
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I got the same one, not really wild about it. I love the clips and the clip holders. My paint stand is one from Micromark, it's one that you hold in your hands, it has foam that contacts inside the body and a spring to keep tension on it. It's easy to maneuver, and easy to get it hung up after painting before transferring the body to the dehydrator. It was highly recommended by one of my friends, I saw how he used it and I got one ASAP and quit using the old coat hangers and don't miss them a bit. Micromark Hold It Easy
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Black panel will look okay, though with your stripes and taillight surrounds you start to border on making it look a bit too "JC Whitney" before it's all said and done. Ditch the chrome and put in the sequential taillight blinkers that look so cool on the 2010's. And no, do not put on a big blob of bird poop over the upper left corner of your rear window, it totally destroys the balance of the design