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#1 |
Ocean Warrior
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https://www.amazon.com/Uxcell-a11112...%2C289&sr=8-14
![]() BTW, remember to order a lanyard to go around your neck for one key or Gene Hackman might get very angry. ![]() Last edited by ET2SN; 05-12-22 at 02:33 PM. |
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#2 |
Born to Run Silent
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I'll have to do that on my next missile launch model, I didn't leave myself room on the console.
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SUBSIM - 26 Years on the Web |
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#3 |
Born to Run Silent
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Well, I went around the whole sub and sanded on the seam between the vertical scribed lines, hoping to diminish the seam without marring the lines too much.
Reprimed the model last night, the seam still seems pretty evident. ![]() ![]() ![]() Sigh. Any suggestions? Should I add filler along the entire line and sand? Wet sand? Move on and paint it?
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SUBSIM - 26 Years on the Web |
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#4 |
CINC Pacific Fleet
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I say use a plastic filler with a colour as close as possible to the main colour on the sub.
Since it's only this small line that needs to be covered I say use a small spatula knife and use very little filler at each moment. Let it dry and then sand with a toothbrush covered with sandpaper..Starting with low numbers and end with high numbers. low E.g 250/300. High E.g 900/1000. It doesn't look beautiful this line going all the way around the sub. It somehow destroy the look of it. And you want your model look as realistic as possible. I also recommend you use this tool after sanding https://www.scalemodellingnow.com/hn...ll-rivet-maker Markus
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My little lovely female cat |
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#5 |
Ocean Warrior
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On that kit, the seam is what builds character.
![]() ![]() I just looked at mine and something that always bugged me is the vertical scribed lines, there's way too many of them. ![]() Anyway, have you considered brewing your own "sprue goo"? Get a fresh bottle of Tamiya Extra Thin glue then chop up all the sprues that came in the kit and add them to the bottle of glue. Keep adding sprue and stir up the goop until you get something with the consistency of putty. Use that as your filler and you won't have to deal with putty shrinking six months down the road or filler that dries harder than the plastic. ![]() Another possibility is using Tamiya's white or gray primer in the square bottle. This is a fairly "hot" lacquer primer that has a consistency that's just short of Testor's tube glue. Make sure its fully cured before you start to sand it. My other idea is to find Tamiya's plastic putty in the tube. I'm pretty sure this stuff is "sprue goo" made from white plastic. I had really good results using this stuff on the sleeper of an Italeri Peterbilt truck (these kits were infamous for having "short shots" in the plastic). Anyway, keep calm and keep sanding. ![]() ![]() |
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#6 |
Born to Run Silent
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All right, okay, thank for the constructive suggestions. I will keep working on the seam. Marcus, you're right, I think having that seem does ruin the look, so I will take the weekend off from modeling and pick up Monday.
I like your sprue glue idea, that sounds like fun just making it ![]()
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SUBSIM - 26 Years on the Web |
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#7 |
CINC Pacific Fleet
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Do you have some extra model parts from this extra sub you bought ?
If so then practice either my recommendation or ET2SN recommendation ´cause it would be sad if your made mistake on your model. Markus
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My little lovely female cat |
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#8 |
Ocean Warrior
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#9 | |
Ocean Warrior
![]() Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Kentucky
Posts: 2,528
Downloads: 77
Uploads: 0
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