Jump to content
HOLIDAY DONATION DRIVE - SUPPORT MSW - DO YOUR PART TO KEEP THIS GREAT FORUM GOING! ×

Canute

NRG Member
  • Posts

    6,355
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Canute

  1. Denis, the Do-200 is the B-17 in Luftwaffe paint. Looked on Wiki. I got myself wrapped up with the FW-200 Kondor, 4 engine transport used by the Luftwaffe as long range patrolling over the Atlantic.
  2. Jack, I'm in, bud. Something I saw and read about on a train site. The guy used a yellow primer, I think Badger. Let it dry. Then he sprayed a red oxide (freight car color) over the yellow. Made the red pop. You'll be doing orange over almost the whole thing. Maybe a try? I will dig into it in the morning, in my spare time.
  3. Craig, does AK metal do a burnt metal of titanium? Thinking jet exhausts.
  4. I'm guessing the Focke Wulf you cite, Popeye, are the FW-190 and Ta152 series fighters. I'm a fan of them too.👍
  5. Bob, nice job with the ole TISEO Phantom. Got a few hours in them. TISEO is that tube sticking out of the left wing. I don't know; my Air Guard unit took pretty good care of our Phantoms, although a long deployment could play havoc with appearances.
  6. Bob, the GrandtLine parts went to SanJuanDetails.com. Their parts were/are too good to go away. They do HO, S, O and Large Scale hardware. And wash the 3D parts in Dawn and warm water before painting. The waxes used with these printers leave a residue that could prevent the paint from adhering well. The primer Kurt talks about sounds interesting; wonder how it works on the hand cast resin parts out there. Those resins are a polyurethane material. Believe it's different from the resins and plastics used in these 3D printers.
  7. Guys, take a look at this website. It the 8th AF memorial down in Savannah, GA. https://www.mightyeighth.org/ Lots of a/c inside and out. Main display is B-17G City of Savannah, GA. (Apparently, Boeing built planes there) And they built a replica English chapel on the grounds. Very moving memorial. Their cafeteria is decorated as an English pub, too.
  8. I'm in, too. Yep, the ole Cadillacs had wide whitewalls. One of my neighbors growing up had a '53 with the whitewalls and rudimentary tail fins.
  9. Your SBD is coming along nicely, Edward. 👍 Lou, they were more interested in the operating doo-dads, like the operating bomb drop or folding wings. But, I think I built most of those old Monogram kits.
  10. 6,000 rounds per minute for the aerial version in most fighters. Slinging 20 mm ammo of every description. Most fighters hold 650 to 1200 rounds. The F-4 held 10 seconds of ammo. That APC must haul a ton of ammo. Factoid: most fighters fired no more than a 2 second burst, any longer risked warping the barrels. That did happen, because we had one set of barrels at Korat that was twisted like a candy cane.
  11. Jack, you done good. Nicely done diorama. Even with the REMFs coming out of the woodwork. Edward, you sound like you have what I have. It's called Peter Pan Syndrome - I don't want to grow up. Guys, you don't ever want to totally expose your stash. If the Admiral ever finds out...
  12. Yeah, real front lines. And bad guys wore different duds from the locals.
  13. I've seen a product called Mr Surfacer. Comes in 3 thicknesses for various situations, 500 (thickest), 1000 and I think 1500 (thinnest). I have never used it personally, but you may want to check some of the aircraft and armor websites for their use. I'd be worried about removing too much detail around those seams with the stretched sprues, if you need to sand them down.
  14. Like Egilman says, a dirty wash of some kind would give it a more used look. And some tire scuffs. Even our parking areas has scuffs and fluid spills (oils, fuel, whatever) The deck is too clean. That being said, I do like the overall look.
  15. The one in the middle, with minimal detail. The aftermarket ones need barrels now.
  16. OC, family first. Take care of the Admiral, the hobby stuff will wait, mate.
  17. OC, glad you could work the canopy issue out. That's using you think machine.
  18. They liked to use Tiffany glass in the transoms. Those transoms disappeared by the 20s, I think. There was another wood car kit line I've seen, named Westwood. They used plastic windows and doors with wood sides, built up roof clerestories of wood and plastic ribs. Some roofs were paper, others were vacuform styrene.
  19. Follow doc.s orders. Been thru a pneumonia bout years back. Felt tired all the time, taking prednisone and some nebulizer treatments. No fun.
  20. The Mossie is looking the right proper intruder, OC. Well done.
  21. I forget how close we got but definitely within 50'. Not as close as we'd get flying close formation with another fighter, but that was off a wingtip. Needed to do that if flying in heavy weather. Good way to wear out the guys on the wing. The pilot for sticking so close and the backseater becoming a verbal instrument panel/weather observer/whatever else the pilot needed. Fun, huh?
  22. We get Mallards, Canada geese and a number of wading birds (herons, egrets mostly).
×
×
  • Create New...