- Thread starter
-
- #161
Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules
That is !#**!#! amazing work.Thanks guys
Painting is officially underway. Started on Monday when it was almost 80, and no wind so I could get outside to lay down the Tamiya solvent-based primer; white for the insides and gray for the rest. Yesterday after a full day to dry I airbrushed Tamiya gloss white for interior and a mixture of Tamiya of Gloss whilte an Flat Neutral Gray. I still have to paint the outsides with Life Color Haze Gray. After the white dried I started picking out the detials. This work still goes on. I'm reprinting a couple of parts for various reasons, and repaired a print defect on the ring frame/roof part.
Here's the primed parts.
View attachment 767572
View attachment 767573
I love how the details pop with the primer on. Before painting I had reprinted a bunch of new ladder rungs and fixed all the broken ones.
View attachment 767574
The insides are now fully gloss white. Sorry about the terrible staging…I tend not to spend a lot of time on the picture taking.
View attachment 767575
I will have to mask all the opennings from the inside to paint the haze gray on the outside. In the handling of the I broke ANOTHER bottom ladder rung. I'm thinking in my excellent 20/20 hindsight that I should have printed the ladder mounting lugs and made them out of bent wire. These things are driving me nuts and I don't like how slopped up the work looks becuase of all the fussing.
View attachment 767576
Detail painting started with the frame assembly. It's a work in progress since there's more to do.
View attachment 767577
Today, I went back and overcoated all the rods with Dull Coat to seal the alcohol-based paint so I could paint it with Molotow Chrome paint which is also alcohol-based and would dissolve the white. I did the same on a lot of the gray parts that are going to get any metallic finishes.
I started painting the circuit panels for the UHR. These are not glued it. There's a lot of bits that need to be picked out on these parts.
View attachment 767578
Today I fixed the print defect on the ring frame. I first trimmed the upper edge so a piece of shaped styrene would properly seat. I then put a piece of art paper as a backing held with CA and filled the broken area with Bondic. After sanding flush, and re-trimming the upper edge, I CA'd the rim piece in and finished sanded that. The repair will be undetectable. This rim will be cut away to expose for view the turret ring base and the training rack and pinion.
View attachment 767579
View attachment 767580
I also did something I should have done a long time ago. I made a resin vat protecter out of a piece of scrap cardboard. I'm using a spring built plate on my 3D printer that really saves time by letting you pop off the spring plate, bend it to remove the parts, clean it and then snap it back on. It's held by a 3M magnetic backing. The problem arises when I try to align it before snapping it back on. Occasionally I loss grip of it just as I'm ready to snap it up and it heads into the resin vat. That's no big deal. The big deal is when it goes in edge first and the edges are pretty thin. And this edge can penetrate the FEP and that is very bad. Now if it falls, it won't do any damage.
View attachment 767581