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Everything posted by DocRob
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Israeli Mirage III C with Atar9C
DocRob replied to Kaireckstadt's topic in LSM 1/35 and Larger Work In Progress
I sometimes use light grey on very fine parts, which should be matte metallic. When you lean back and look at your last pic, it looks almost grey. Some carefully rubbed on steel pigments may enhance the metallic appearance. Most brushable metallic paints have a too coarse grain for my liking and do absolutely not look like the real thing. The only exception I sometimes make are the Scale75 metallic sets, which behave a bit better than others I tried. METAL and ALCHEMY STEEL paint set - Scale75 Between history and legend METAL and ALCHEMY GOLDEN paint set - Scale75 Between history and legend Cheers Rob- 719 replies
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Working with lathes on metal does include a lot of learning and understanding of the different metals and their characteristics. Metallurgy is a wide field and you absolutely need the knowledge, to get decent results, guess how I know . Cheers Rob
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I couldn't have said it better than Hubert, thanks for that. Another aspect in working with metals by machines is, most kinds of metal need cooling or lubricating while working on. You can't do that with the Proxxon. When I was young, I worked in light engineering for years, using all types of machines for a wide array of metals and these were definitely another breed. The tiny Proxon is only sufficent for small wooden parts. It has a relatively low torque and you can fit long parts through it's spindle only up to a diameter of 10 mm. You are able to work with bigger diameters, but I doubt, the torque will be enough. It's a machine specialized for working on the masts and yards, which have a surprisingly variety of conical areas or indentions and this is, where this machine will shine, working with a chisel or sanding paper. I got the pair relatively cheap and they will be used for my shipbuilding projects with the additional benefit of working relatively quite and not covering too much space on the bench. Cheers Rob
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Gracias Amigos, this fresh cut wood has to dry for some time. In the next winter it will give our house a nice aroma when the fireplace is in use. Cheers Rob
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What is better than tools, right guys, machiiines. Today, I received my Proxxon Lathe and disc sander, which will be very helpful for my wooden ship projects. The sander is equipped with adhesive sanding discs, which are easy to interchange. the adjustable table and the tiny gap, will make it ideal for sanding planks and other small parts and the best, it's relatively quiet. The lathe will be helpful shaping the masts with different diameters and sanding the yards conical. To add to the woodworking experience, I recieved almost two tons of firewood today. Finest Brezo and Haya wood, which are different types of beechwood. My back can tell you something about the two tons . Cheers Rob
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I thought about this too, seems to be an interesting one. Cheers Rob
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Fw190A-8 3/JG1 crash Vreeland
DocRob replied to JeroenPeters's topic in LSM 1/35 and Larger Work In Progress
Noice Jeroen, where I would have closed the hatch, you made a mini kit out of it . Cheers Rob -
Israeli Mirage III C with Atar9C
DocRob replied to Kaireckstadt's topic in LSM 1/35 and Larger Work In Progress
Good to know, otherways, it would lead to panicked outcries like: 'I said flaps down, not up...' . Than god for international standards. Cheers Rob- 719 replies
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I feel the need... for Shake and Bake... Tamiya StuG
DocRob replied to GazzaS's topic in LSM 1/35 and Larger Work In Progress
I'm sure you will Gaz, your whitewash looks great and will be enhanced by the use of oils. For the washable white, I'm not so sure, I haven't tried the stuff and it will be tested thoroughly before use. If it fails, it will be hairspray too . Cheers Rob -
Zoukei-Mura P51D Mustang SWS No 4.
DocRob replied to Bomber_County's topic in LSM 1/35 and Larger Work In Progress
I just found a new product from HGW. It's a masking set, unfortunately for the Tamiya kit, for masking the body panels. If they fit, that could be a serious time saver for a NMF bird. P-51D MUSTANG - SURFACE PANELS MASK - 1/32 - MIR/32008 (hgwmodels.cz) Cheers Rob -
Zoukei-Mura P51D Mustang SWS No 4.
DocRob replied to Bomber_County's topic in LSM 1/35 and Larger Work In Progress
When I visited Planes of Fame in Chino, California some years ago, I bought a book about the 506th Fighter Group, signed by Abner m. Aust, the last WWII ace. If I do a NMF Mustang, it will be one of the schemes in the book. Luckily the decals are included for some of the planes in different scales and they are printed by Techmod, which is a good sign. Cheers Rob This is the book These are my favorite schemes: This is the signed back cover -
Very interested to see your aluminum results in your WIP. I had to enlarge my spray booth to and used the good working fan of the old one with a transparent plastic container as the new booth. After some cutting and duct-taping, I added some flexible LED strips around, finished. The booth still works t my satisfaction after three years of use and was a real cheapo. Cheers Rob Old one not fitting the ZM TA-152 Better Finished
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Israeli Mirage III C with Atar9C
DocRob replied to Kaireckstadt's topic in LSM 1/35 and Larger Work In Progress
Exactly the right decision, to stay away from black for weathering. The way you did it, it remarkably pops and brings everything to live. For removing oil colours, I use cotton swabs only on a few occasions. I prefer a flat midsized brush, which has a good holding capacity for paint and thinner. This makes the oil effects more controllable, as you can play with the amount of thinner and the dampness of the brush. As a side effect there is less plastic trash, for which some sea turtles will be thankful. Cheers Rob- 719 replies
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Gracias Carl, as this paintjob requires a thorough plan, it's easy to do a step by step. Until now, everything was easy and redoable, now comes the make or brake part . Cheers Rob
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Thanks Gaz, but what you see is the chipping . The idea is, to apply the colour onto the rust and leave it partly uncovered, where the corrosion won the battle. I will use a fine brush, applying the paint in little strokes and dots and build the colour up this way, at least, that's the plan. Cheers Rob
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Thanks for the encouragement Kai. Yesterday, when I was taking the photos, I thought about a powersuit left to rot in a muddy lake, replicated by acrylic water with lots of algae and other vegetation around. Let's wait and see, there is a second Ammoknight in the box, ... Cheers Rob
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I feel the need... for Shake and Bake... Tamiya StuG
DocRob replied to GazzaS's topic in LSM 1/35 and Larger Work In Progress
The winter wash looks perfect, you can't beat hairspray for these type of camo, although, I will at least try the washable white on a dummy part. Good to know, that Panzer Putty is such a menace with lacquers. I used it with acrylics until now and had no problems at all. Like Kai said, the residues will be mostly hidden and a nice winter camo needs a healthy dose of slush and mud . Cheers Rob -
PCM Focke Wulf FW 190 A-1/A-2/A-3
DocRob replied to GazzaS's topic in LSM 1/35 and Larger Work In Progress
Great fix with the canopy. and a nice journey to follow your build, but as an 'Alter Preuße', I will be in the front row of your next build. With brass and rigging involved, which only raises even more interest. Cheers Rob -
Zoukei-Mura P51D Mustang SWS No 4.
DocRob replied to Bomber_County's topic in LSM 1/35 and Larger Work In Progress
Looking comfortingly good Phil. You are my current dummy, like we say in surfing , if the air is clear with your build, my cowardly me is starting mine. Progress is looking fine and what is to resist, with the powerful lines of a Mustang. Looking at yours, I may change my plan for building it as a British Mustang IV with camo to a NMF one. Cheers Rob -
With most kits, I apply the base colours on a coat of primer and then add the effects like rust and others onto it. The only exception in my builds is the use of the hairspray method, which I really like for heavy weathering exactly for the fact, that it is right, building up the layers like on real subjects and erase layer(s) above. With the Ammoknight, I try something different. I build the layers of paint and rust up from the lowest layer, being primer, corrosion being the second layer and the base colour being the upmost. It's an experiment and the powersuit with it's organic shape and the 1/20 scale seems to be the perfect canvas. The difficulty I see for the next step of painting is, that there is no room for mistakes, because it's essentiell, that the colouration must be coherent on the hole body and there is no taking back. I'm not sure, if I can master that, but will try. Meanwhile, there are some pictures of my stomp footed friend, who looks, like he had a great time somewhere in a lake . Cheers Rob
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Thank you Kai and Kev, this is a pure fun project for me and I like to be able to go a little over board, because the used techniques will help in other cases, used a little more restrained. Cheers Rob
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Let's see, how fast this thing corrodes. First of all, I used an AK rust colour set, which generally was up to the job with the exception of the two darkest shades, which literally hardened in separated components and were beyond stirring up. I've never encountered something like this, with the other four colours being completely usable. First layer of rust dabbed on with the darkest shade, using a stiff old brush. The legs already received their second coat, a tad lighter. This base coat was a bit more liquid, to cover larger areas of the suit. As ugly as it is, I used the second colour, with slightly less area to randomly cover. I turned the brush permanently between my fingers, for hindering repeating patterns. With the third and fourth shade, always using a lighter colour, I covered even less area and used it more dryly, while dabbing on. I also emphasized the contours of the powersuit a little, unnecessary but fun. Cheers Rob
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Please WIP this strange looking flying thingy. It looks like it has been part in the notorious films of the Sharknado series . Cheers Rob