Building the Hasegawa 1/32 P-12E, part 2
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- čas přidán 17. 02. 2024
- Update on the classic Hasegawa Boeing P-12E kit. Cockpit detailing, resin engine construction, scratchbuilding techniques, correcting errors and other tidbits.
Vector resin engine: www.neomega-resin.com/
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Nice to see you taking your time with this. When I used to frequent forums, I was forever rushing projects, just to have something to post. If you're in that situation, remind yourself that it's your project and you're doing it for you, not them! Looking forward to seeing how this kit turns out.
Thanks so much for the comments, very much appreciated and a good reminder that, at the end of the day, it will be sitting on my shelf so ultimately it has to satisfy me and my picky standards !
Nice work! We all make things difficult for ourselves sometimes, I'm currently working on an idea I had at least 50 years ago which involves two front halves of a car joined together. I think at last I have the skills to make it work and so far it's gone well. It can only be a matter of time before it all goes disastrously wrong!
Thanks for reminding me about Dymo tape- I must try to get hold of some.
Thanks for the comments and good luck with the project. A "push me pull you" car sounds really interesting!
@@warpedplastic It's not been as tricky as I thought it might be, fortunately!
There is an auto mechanic not far from where I live that did just that with real cars. The fronts of two VW Beetles were welded together, back to back, and mounted on a tall metal pole. It's easy to find his shop from quite a distance. 😊
@@Chilly_Billy Its been done for real with two front wheel drives to make a twin engined two driver four wheel steering thing!
Greetings from the uk its looking good mate happy modelling old boy 👍
Thanks fella and greetings from frosty Canada!
Excelent, quite the best modelling site I've seen so far.
Yes, our friends (?) at Amazon have something like Dymo tape. Thanks for that tip, I hadn't seen it before.
You're very welcome, and thank you for staying with the channel!
I really appreciate your view on building-up gaps with plastic stock vs. putty. It seems to be an older concept lost on younger/newer modelers. While putty can do a good job in certain circumstances, I believe those are limited compared sheet styrene cut to fit a gap.
I agree, there seems to be a lot of modellers these days who rely on large quantities of filler to cover up gaps rather than correcting the fit problem at its source. A bit of filler is fine now and then, but using a lot to fill large gaps will likely crack eventually. Many thanks for the comments.
Interesting video! Thanks for making it different. BTW, what is that alien hanging on your wall??
Many thanks for the comment. It's the alien from "Independence Day".
FIRST!!! :DDDD
Congrats!