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Everything posted by Canute
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Bell UH-1H Huey By lmagna - Dragon - 1/35 - PLASTIC
Canute replied to lmagna's topic in Non-ship/categorised builds
I suspect your photo is closer to the reality of the day. Our a/c had a medium gray cockpit with black instrument panels. The round gauges had color marks for good and bad ranges. The radio and computer panels were generally scuffed, because so many feet got in there in the course of doing maintenance. The canopy rails were black, always good in SEA. Rest your arms on them and risk getting burned. Typical of many fighters. -
Well, it's pretty darn close, Mark. Maybe more like a kit-bash. The kit supplies sticks, tubing, wire, cordage and a handful of lead/pewter castings. Somewhere a lot of kit wood walked and I ended up acquiring a lot of replacement packs. Been pulling dimensions from the plans for the deck house. I'm gonna replace the provided wood sticks for the house siding with some Evergreen Novelty siding. Sometimes called ship-lap siding. The marine equipment of many of the NY harbor railroads used the stuff on their craft. Puzzling over the windows and doors. May replace the sticks with some plastic castings that actually look like windows and doors. In this scale , I'm wondering if cutting the 2" x 6" planking into 24' lengths would be worth the effort; too small to see the difference
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Excellent job.👍 And it'd be a sin to waste that fine Irish whiskey.
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EG, I like the icy roads theme. My Dad wad a 3rd Army MP directing the armor north from Metz, in France, toward Bastogne. I wandered that area when I was stationed there. Heavily wooded, some old stone bridges and a high crown on the road. Yeah, they would have slid off into the ditches. Brr, just thinking about that. Got any jalapenos for those nachoes? 😁🤣
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Bell UH-1H Huey By lmagna - Dragon - 1/35 - PLASTIC
Canute replied to lmagna's topic in Non-ship/categorised builds
A macabre sense of humor was pretty typical. Some F4Es had armor plate over areas on the belly of the jet, supposedly to protect things like the generators and lox bottle. The fuel was in the wings and fuselage and had self sealing tanks and some kind of foam in the tanks. The armor plate disappeared in combat. Too much excess weight for negligible protection. We aircrew always said we'd be done in by the golden BB, i.e., when your time was up, the game was over. Very fatalistic. Our protection was our speed versus the forces down south. Over North Viet Nam, eyeballs, speed and hopefully the jamming pods we carried were our protection. -
Started planking the hull sides, but ran into a bit of a quandary. I suspect the hull former, a piece of plywood, is pretty dried out due to it's age. I think my glue seeped into the wood too fast. I'm using an Aleene's extra tacky glue; this glue feels like working with the old Duco cement, without the odor. I applied the Aleene's glue, but by the time I could lay a strip down, the glue seemed dry. No stickiness. I had one suggestion for sealing the wood with glue and letting it dry. Expect it should work; it's what I do if gluing metals to wood with CA. My plan is to glue the bottom planking around the hull and paint it anti fouling red. The rest of the planking will just be stained brownish black.
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Work carefully cleaning up the flash, some of it may be attachment points for other parts. I use an #11 blade and a number of various grades of sanding sticks for cleanup. I use Vallejo putty to fill gaps, as do a number of the other modelers on this site.
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It'll be for a layout model, Edward. I'm working up a small NY City harbor station of the railroad I model. It was a vest pocket yard on the Bronx Boro side of the Harlem River. Right now it's a foundation with a few tracks and a float bridge. Kind of novel station, since it had an oval freight house.
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Here's another work barge, although this one had multiple uses. It was moved by tug and could be used as a lifting crane or pile driver. These usually weren't railroad owned; several contractors would have a number of these barges. I picked this up a number of years ago, but it was buried under whatever other accumulated stuff I'd collected over the years. I put the instructions into a binder to prevent any further losses. I did have to gather up a good collection of stripwood, since some of the kit stuff went over the hills and far away. The kit brass held up pretty well, seems to have minimal corrosion. The kit dates from 1986. The barge hull is a plywood former, to which I will be applying HO scale 2 x 6 inch planks. The following is is the rest of what comes in the box.
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Well, the little box is about done. I have the deck on and am installing the end railings. Have to make sure the side railings don't pinch the end pieces. Bollardsand cleats are next. Just have to paint up the resin parts. Also have some old tires to drape over the sides. These acted as fenders. On deck is another harbor work boat, a floating crane/pile driver.
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SBD-3 Dauntless 1:48 Hasegawa - Edwardkenway-FINISHED
Canute replied to Edwardkenway's topic in Non-ship/categorised builds
Too clean. Interesting bird, though. I'd guess maybe a 1/72 or 1/144. Will need a lot of space to display. From guys who intercepted these a/c, the turbo-props were loud, so our guys would take pictures and leave them be, if possible. -
Jack, hope your Shermans have markings for the 4th or 10th Armored Divisions. The 4th was Patton's spearhead heading up to Bastogne. The 10th was the division my Uncle Jimmy served in and helped open Bastogne. My Dad was one of the MPs directing traffic up those frozen French and Belgian roads. I still get goose bumps in mid December remembering Dad's tales of Shermans sliding off the high crowned frozen roads into the ditches.
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Kurt, I am. I've been in Somerville a time or two, when I worked NJ emergency management, out of Piscataway. Used to be a good BBQ joint with a blues club attached, I vaguely remember. Grew up in Bergen County. We do a similar Friday night drill here from April to mid September.. And dancing to a variety of live bands. We're pretty touristy around here, so the precautions are really crimping the whole scene on our Main Street.
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