Tuesday, 26 June 2012

Ping!

Here is a picture of my model room floor.  I've decided to feature it on my blog as it is currently playing host to around 1000 lost parts.

This is a problem that anyone involved in this mad hobby of ours has to endure on a daily basis.  How many times have you been about to fit that tiny but vital part using your special fine-pointed tweezers when you've heard the dreaded sound -ping! - and it's vanished.

I can't count how many times my wife has come into my room and found me on my hands and knees searching in vain,  Quite often she joins in, even though she has no idea what she's looking for...

I would like a tool, a plastic magnet, if you like, that attracts the missing parts.  Something that can locate plastic and resin parts would be for me the invention of the century.


That's my rant for the day over.  Back to the sea of missing bits.

Saturday, 16 June 2012

New 'Hip' Replacement

Coming on well at the moment is this MiL Mi 8 'HIP' in 1/35 scale from Trumpeter, who else?  Well, no-one else would do a Soviet Transport helicopter, especially not in this scale.




Anyway, a few more days' work will see it done.  More to say on this large project later.  Can't wait?  Neither can I!


The other project I'm working on is the Su-27 from Eduard.  I'm having another Russian phase.



Saturday, 26 May 2012

Zero for Christmas!


Christmas is really for children, as we all know, but it can be made to appeal to adults by giving them the sort of gift that really has lasting appeal.  My wife knows what I like, and last Christmas she gave me a 1/32 A6M-2 Zero from Tamiya.  It was stashed under the bed for a while, and I just 'sensed' it was there.....

Now here we are in May and I'm still enjoying it.  I've had other, more pressing projects, so I've only been able to do a bit on it every now and then until now.  But I have at last been able to finish it, and I thought I would share it with readers on here.

Here are a few views of the engine and the cockpit.  I've used lead and copper wire to detail both areas.  To add a detail set for this project would just be overkill.  The kit offers plenty.  It has tried my patience a little - adding the wings and tail, for instance.  Not a perfect fit.  Some fine cracks have to be filled and a bit of trimming is needed, especially on the wings.







It seemed appropriate to receive a 'Pearl Harbour Attack Zero" seventy years to the month after the actual event.   A fabulous build, I hope you enjoy these photos.




Tuesday, 15 May 2012

The Final Hog

I suppose the prospect of an A-10 in its lizard scheme did seem a well-trodden path, but recently I built this one from Hobby Boss.  The old Tamiya kit was always good but like the rest of us, it's getting a bit old.

This new kit is quite different.  Extensive detail, nice decals, lovely clear transparencies.  The only build problem I had was getting the fuselage together.  The best way I found to solve this was to glue the front half together and allow it to dry.  This forms an anchor to allow the rear half to be fixed.

Fitting the flaps was interesting.  An empty slot in the wing was the flap's home!  One false move and it would be lost in the wing forever.  After that it was plain sailing, an absorbing build.  LOADS of weapons.







You can add resin and etched parts if you want to, but I suggest just doing it out of the box.  It looks accurate, it looks good, and it is fun.

Monday, 2 April 2012

Dora-Rama


After taking so much time getting it right, your pride and joy deserves much more than just a shelf. Since there is now such a wide range of figures and accessories in 1/48 scale, I felt a 'mini-rama' to be an entirely appropriate setting for the FW190 Dora.

For a few of your English pounds, you get a nice selection of Luftwaffe officers and men in useful poses - you even get a dog! So using a 10" by 8" picture frame, railway ballast and assorted static grass, I go to to work.

The whole thing rests on regular plaster filler from a local DIY store. While it was drying I carved out some rough planks and added the ballast. The idea was for a small revetment which the Luftwaffe were forced to use during this period of war. With everything painted and grassed up, I felt the scene was still lacking something. A search through assorted stashes revealed some Verlinden late war signs and a length of chain. Check the photos, you can see where it all went.

I think today, more and more, just completing the model isn't always enough. The resources are there to enable the modeller to go a step further and really make the most of his (or her) creation.



Monday, 19 March 2012

The Tribolt News


Yes, it's another Thunderbolt. Three in a row, to be exact.

This time it's the Tamiya kit. I really wanted to do in a bare metal finish. Zotz decals offer around 10 subjects to choose from, and I chose Dorothy 'K'. It was a D-28 with a retro-fitted fin fillet. For this, I used Tamiya's P-47M as all the parts to do Dorothy (as it were) are in the box.


Thursday, 15 March 2012

Big Hawg


Your eyes do not deceive you, yet another Hobby Boss release - their A-10A in 1/48, big brother to aforementioned L'il Hawg .

I checked, and this is one of HB's earlier releases, as the parts fit is not as crisp as on their later kits. It does need more rubbing down, and a little more filler, but the results? So far, so good. It has loads of weapons, including the Avenger cannon - a kit in itself.