Scale Modelling is fun, right?

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  • Опубліковано 22 сер 2024
  • I used to be a good scale modeller. I have various local plaques and awards. However, I've stayed in the early to mid 2000s, whilst modeling has apparently advanced.
    This video is just for the sake of it. Don't worry, more 'routine' videos shall follow.
    Patreon: / the_chieftain
    Direct Paypal paypal.me/thec...
    Subscribestar: www.subscribes...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,1 тис.

  • @craigwinter3792
    @craigwinter3792 4 роки тому +631

    *see the individual track links and pads*
    Let's go build a Spitfire.

    • @ryancook6452
      @ryancook6452 4 роки тому +54

      Yeah I'll take the air fix one that's like 6 parts and need no glue

    • @orno0321
      @orno0321 4 роки тому +13

      @@ryancook6452 May I suggest Gunpla lmao?

    • @paulfrantizek102
      @paulfrantizek102 4 роки тому +23

      The individual track links are a pain to assemble but the result is so much better than the one-piece vinyl jobs that it's worth it.

    • @TheFranssiBrother
      @TheFranssiBrother 4 роки тому +2

      My exact words in my head when I assembled first tank model after building multiple planes. The tank in question was Renault FT

    • @f1matt
      @f1matt 4 роки тому

      Haha yup!

  • @SomeoneDK
    @SomeoneDK 4 роки тому +535

    The rumor is Meng made the BMPT just for you, so you can tension the track, after you spend 6 months just building one side of track 🤣

    • @wbertie2604
      @wbertie2604 4 роки тому +7

      The number of parts reminds of the wax on, wax off montage in The Karate Kid. Approach it as a Zen/martial arts thing?

    • @Lonewolfmike
      @Lonewolfmike 4 роки тому +10

      Chieftains' personal version of hell only smaller. LOL

    • @Emdee5632
      @Emdee5632 4 роки тому +5

      I recently finished building the tracks of Takom's 1 : 16 scale Renault FT.

    • @wbertie2604
      @wbertie2604 4 роки тому +7

      @@Emdee5632 how's the therapy coming along?

    • @markfryer9880
      @markfryer9880 4 роки тому +5

      @@wbertie2604 Well he did state his achievement in a complete sentence, so my guess is that he is just marginally hanging on to his sanity. How he is by the end of his isolation period as relevant to his own country, remains to be seen. If he takes on another model during this time then all bets are off.

  • @hannahranga
    @hannahranga 4 роки тому +763

    I think you're confusing the peaceful and relaxing hobby of collecting scale model kits with the painstaking hobby of actually building them.

    • @zidan1hao917
      @zidan1hao917 4 роки тому +58

      Just buy them and horde them in the corner

    • @catfish552
      @catfish552 4 роки тому +115

      Collecting: Nice
      Displaying and arranging models on shelves: Nice
      We don't talk about the bit in between.

    • @byebye1813
      @byebye1813 4 роки тому +17

      I have a Millennium Falcon model I bought 11 years ago for something mental like £300... still in the corner to this day.

    • @steveconnor6880
      @steveconnor6880 4 роки тому +9

      Galahad, I think we like perusing through our stashes and talking about them than building them.

    • @sterbi9722
      @sterbi9722 4 роки тому +8

      And then there’s scale figures. God damn 1/72

  • @Drachinifel
    @Drachinifel 4 роки тому +85

    Purchasing the hybrid carrier Mogami may not have been a wise move, but nowhere near as unwise a move as it was for the IJN in real life 😁

    • @TheChieftainsHatch
      @TheChieftainsHatch  4 роки тому +16

      We'll see how I get on, but I've a Leander class on the slipway ahead of it. Have you shown off your models anywhere?

    • @Drachinifel
      @Drachinifel 4 роки тому +14

      @@TheChieftainsHatch not yet. But I have a feeling I'm going to have to now. :)

    • @TheChieftainsHatch
      @TheChieftainsHatch  4 роки тому +20

      @@Drachinifel If even the tank guy is showing off his models of floaty things, you need to at least try to keep up!

    • @doncarlton4858
      @doncarlton4858 3 роки тому

      😂😂😂

  • @michaelporzio7384
    @michaelporzio7384 4 роки тому +184

    When one is a child you build a kit paint it and it looks great! you put on a shelf. As an adult you are checking the number of track links, the correct paint scheme for the time period the correct unit markings and the correct uniform on the military miniatures. Then you see what an expert modeler on UA-cam can do with super detailing, photo-etched parts and impeccable historical research and you give up. Stay Well Chieftain.

    • @crazytrain7114
      @crazytrain7114 4 роки тому +11

      Nah, build to your specification. I'm on to dragsters, armor no longer appeals to me. I think I may start doing IMSA kits from the 70s and 80s next

    • @vlad_8011
      @vlad_8011 4 роки тому +9

      Well, not necessary. I started model kits when i was 14. I havent access to internet, my only source with my tiny budget was old tamiya and Academy kits and i was playing on PC at Hidden & Dangerous 2, trying to make my model kits look like in the game. Some years ago i looked at my collection, at those first models - after 10 years, with more techniques, skills etc. I didnt have enough force to put them in trash, so i decided to clean them to bare plastic with.... "KRET" (in Poland, its chemical granulate for cleaning toilet tubes - it dissolve everything except plastic) and re-detail those kits. Now with large collection i ended up with no more space for model kits, but still looking over internet at some kits i wanted to build - Some abrams and T-55. I was self-learning modeler, as i had no access to internet till 19, so i made myself tools, few techniques, and much, much improvise. When the world "opened for me" with my first internet at home, i saw many thinner for decals, many pigments and all that chemicals and i actually never used them - home chemistry is best ;) When people ask me, how i made so much models so fast and with such low cost i never know what to answer, but one model took 2 weeks at average, longest time with one model was one month, thanks tospecial parts delivery.

    • @rossfromfriends8468
      @rossfromfriends8468 4 роки тому +3

      michael porzio as I’ve learned, as long as you try to improve a little bit with every model you make, you’ll always be a little better than someone ;)

    • @michaelporzio7384
      @michaelporzio7384 4 роки тому +1

      @@rossfromfriends8468 Thanks Ross. Got a whole bunch of unfinished kits, now is the time to try to build some:)

    • @raytheron
      @raytheron 4 роки тому +8

      Exactly! And we had fun as kids! Nowadays I have to force myself to step back, take a deep breath and remind myself that I.m building for MY PLEASURE only.

  • @343guiltyd
    @343guiltyd 4 роки тому +333

    we have literally watched paint dry with you. why would we not want a video on modeling.

    • @MrHFam-st4ni
      @MrHFam-st4ni 4 роки тому +14

      We need ot watch him do it... with commentary as he rages at the tracks

    • @BAZZAROU812
      @BAZZAROU812 4 роки тому +6

      He's probably going to tell us all about the different scales and who invented model glue..

    • @macbeth2354
      @macbeth2354 4 роки тому +2

      Imagine if he found a discrepancy between the model and the real thing, he's bound to scratch build the correct parts..

    • @core3086
      @core3086 4 роки тому +18

      Just now i realised i need a 6-9 hour Chieftain stream where he looses his mind mounting and ranting about the tracks

    • @catfish552
      @catfish552 4 роки тому +1

      Literally my thoughts

  • @Danfunnyman1234
    @Danfunnyman1234 4 роки тому +162

    Jingles and the Chieftain both showing us their model lot stuffs... I'm good with that.

  • @smokey04b53
    @smokey04b53 4 роки тому +9

    I'm a modeler and a military officer too, but I quit/paused modelling about 10 years ago because every time I PCS'd, no matter how well I tried to pack them, the movers just destroyed them. I have a closet full of kits but they're not getting built until I retire in a few more years. 3 years Army, 21 years AF. Love your content.

  • @APwhiskey
    @APwhiskey 4 роки тому +195

    In middle school I had gotten into 40k, but the military diverted my attention for about 13 years after high school, and I only just got back into it. I now realize how little patience I had back then!!! lol

  • @wilsonj4705
    @wilsonj4705 4 роки тому +100

    Halfway though the BMPT track build I would have a "Oh bugger, the model is on fire" moment

    • @DiggingForFacts
      @DiggingForFacts 4 роки тому +1

      They're honestly not that bad. The same tracks come in their T-90 kits and they go together quite well. Now, getting the Raupen Model track set for the Type-10 is somewhat different. Five parts per individual track link. Making those was a slog

  • @alexwilliamson1486
    @alexwilliamson1486 4 роки тому +18

    Took to modelling after diagnosed with PTSD from British Army, very relaxing, and in a time of lockdown, here in the U.K., it’s been invaluable. Great video! Thankyou, and stay safe my friend.

  • @Yuzral
    @Yuzral 4 роки тому +230

    Being designated an 'essential worker' suddenly doesn't seem nearly so bad...

    • @LordChesalot
      @LordChesalot 4 роки тому +10

      Thanks for doing your job man

    • @samfiadrangus9188
      @samfiadrangus9188 4 роки тому +16

      I feel ya... I wish I could stay home and build models AND still get paid. Keep us at the USPS in your thoughts...

    • @mtb0519
      @mtb0519 4 роки тому

      @@samfiadrangus9188 know the feeling 😂

    • @DudeInWalmart
      @DudeInWalmart 4 роки тому +1

      Same here. Busy as usual at my company.

    • @brianoneil9662
      @brianoneil9662 4 роки тому +8

      With y'all. They send US home (OTR truck driver) everyone will slowly run out of everything. Not just toilet paper.

  • @williameddlewis4625
    @williameddlewis4625 4 роки тому +37

    CHIEFTAIN: omg that track was a night mare to get back on ill make a kit to chill out
    BMPT: I heard you liked end connectors tehehe

  • @neurofiedyamato8763
    @neurofiedyamato8763 4 роки тому +138

    *Track pads exists*
    Tankers: *PTSD*
    Modelers: "This is fun!"
    Chieftain: *Surprised Pikachu face*

  • @jcwoodman5285
    @jcwoodman5285 4 роки тому +21

    I've been F'n up plastic kits since 74🤗
    It's Satisfying & fulfilling to make it all work. It's Zen at its best when I get an 80-90% success by my own hopes😊

  • @JessWLStuart
    @JessWLStuart 4 роки тому +22

    "If I'm happy, I'm happy" BEST MODELLING ADVICE EVER!!!!!!

  • @Panzermeister36
    @Panzermeister36 4 роки тому +37

    Hey Nicholas. Cool to see a modelling video from you!

  • @ExUSSailor
    @ExUSSailor 4 роки тому +33

    When I was 15, I spent the better part of 2 years ever so painstakingly painting, weathering, assembling, and, R/C-ing one of those Lindberg, "Blue Devil", Fletcher Class DD kits. It was equal parts rewarding, and, tooth-grindingly frustrating.

  • @dadwaffle
    @dadwaffle 4 роки тому +80

    Hey Chieftain, I've never done photo-etch decking, admittedly, but I have had to do several details of the same caliber before. In general for ships, I've got a bit of a book, but PE first. You're on the right track - you'll have to sand down the details pretty flat and apply the PE decking over it. However, be sure to double-check what goes where on the original deck before you do, as some of the PE may unnecessarily obliterate some details that you might otherwise not have replacements for. The decking shouldn't add much more height to the deck if everything is smooth. At least, as far as I can gather anyway.
    One more bit of advice, if you're new to photo etch in general: most PE is a bit springy by default, so if you have to make anything rounded, it might be to your benefit to have a lighter handy - gently annealing the parts before trying to put them to a round shape makes them much more pliable and agreeable. Just be careful when annealing railing or very fiddly parts - they WILL warp and melt if you keep the flame on them too long.
    As far as the ship in general, I'm presuming you're also trying to figure out where to even begin with building the kit, yes? I don't want to write too many suggestions and you not need half of them. I'm learning by crash-course, as I have the Tamiya Chikuma and the Trumpeter USS Wasp on my workbench, both with excess details, so I'm happy to offer tips where I can.

    • @T1mbrW0lf
      @T1mbrW0lf 4 роки тому +14

      I strongly suggest that "sanding to remove raised details" should be reserved as a last resort: It is difficult to be precise, and risks damaging details you may wish to retain. There are inexpensive modelers chisels and scrapers available that will leave a smooth surface, and even allow some details to be "saved" for re-use.

    • @dadwaffle
      @dadwaffle 4 роки тому

      @@T1mbrW0lf I would agree with this, to a point. It largely depends on which details you're trying to get rid of, of course, which is something I failed to articulate in my original post. If one trying to remove ugly deck lines or small details which require minimal sanding in the first place, then it's a give and take. But bigger details? I 100% agree with you on trying to remove then wholesale and preserve them if needed.

    • @dadwaffle
      @dadwaffle 4 роки тому +1

      @Nick Popplewell it really largely depends on what you're trying to paint, but generally speaking, you add the photo etch before, since most PE replaces certain details entirely. Exceptions to this are things like railing on ships, which may make it harder to paint the section in general. You can always bend the PE into shape, paint the railing and parts separately, then glue it in place after. But in all other cases, the Pe is done before paint.
      As for stateside PE, I've ordered from White Ensign Models/Tom's Modelworks for ships (they're both handled by the same guy, more or less). That one is based in....CA, if I remember my last order form correctly. There are a few other PE vendors, too, but for the life of me I can't remember which ones are stateside vendors. I'll get back to you tonight when I get home. My job is one of those silly essential things, so I'm out in the field during the day.

    • @landnnut
      @landnnut 4 роки тому

      @Nick Popplewell My guess would be that PE header gaskets would be useful for garage diorama detailing.

    • @tonyromano6220
      @tonyromano6220 4 роки тому

      Nick Popplewell before

  • @raulduke6105
    @raulduke6105 4 роки тому +45

    I built 100 tanks ships and aircraft as a teenager. I’m lots older and being grounded I tried to build a 1/48 Japanese Ki 61. It was a disaster I was so embarrassed I threw it away.

    • @ABrit-bt6ce
      @ABrit-bt6ce 4 роки тому +14

      Make another. If it falls over and sinks into a swamp then make another and another and another.
      Or go out and find girls. No, wait. Build another :)

    • @ricardoaguirre6126
      @ricardoaguirre6126 4 роки тому +3

      My first model was an F/A-18 Super hornet in which I didn't remove the decals properly. Oh how I've improved since then.

  • @Sedan57Chevy
    @Sedan57Chevy 4 роки тому +15

    I wish we got these random videos more often... they're always a real treat to watch!

    • @TheChieftainsHatch
      @TheChieftainsHatch  4 роки тому +10

      Sadly, I generally lack the imagination to come up with them. And, fundamentally, this is a military history channel. I don't want to dilute it.

    • @paulnutter1713
      @paulnutter1713 4 роки тому +4

      @@TheChieftainsHatch you could do a history of military scale modelling, apparently it was started by neanderthal man. They began their tracks but unfortunately died out before completion

    • @christophersmith8316
      @christophersmith8316 4 роки тому

      @@TheChieftainsHatch you are military, so everything you do is military history!

  • @jcjackson726
    @jcjackson726 4 роки тому +16

    LOL 😂 Maybe instead of calling ourselves model builders we just say we’re “model collectors who sometimes build”.

  • @panzer_modeler5369
    @panzer_modeler5369 4 роки тому +5

    Your Abrams "barely legal" in doing is looking great! I just finished air brushing the camo! I've been waiting for a modeling video from you for sooooooooooooo long! THANK YOU!

  • @papaaaaaaa2625
    @papaaaaaaa2625 4 роки тому +50

    I'm a Lucky Guy. My Son is in Cobi Tanks and Planes right now, so it's more of Toy Tanks than Models.
    But it's fun for him (and a bit for me too!).
    Maybe he'll be in modelling in a few years...or maybe not, who knows. But in the Moment it's fun to watch my son, my nephew and their bodies to build and Play with those Tanks and Planes...next one STUG III and Valentine MK III!
    Stay healthy!
    P.s.: I meant buddies. I've got it TOTALY wrong, sorry.

    • @Cyarrick1
      @Cyarrick1 4 роки тому +3

      Cobi is excellent

    • @ridgely1635
      @ridgely1635 4 роки тому +3

      Yeah they are...i just finished my cobi m1 abrahams and its great

    • @TitanShadow
      @TitanShadow 4 роки тому +3

      I just got into Cobi Tanks last year, they make some great sets. Though I miss Mega Bloks/Construx COD builds, some of those were next level building techniques, though the scale was all over the place. Need to find a Cobi Stug III, sold out everywhere in the States.

    • @papaaaaaaa2625
      @papaaaaaaa2625 4 роки тому +4

      @@TitanShadow A new STUG III Ausf. D is out now, so save your Money. My Son builded the STUG III Yesterday, nice Set. I could make a short Video if you want.

    • @crazytrain7114
      @crazytrain7114 4 роки тому +1

      Ok peewee! lmao

  • @IngramZero
    @IngramZero 4 роки тому +4

    Modelling is a great hobby, like most modelers I have moved to the side hobby of model collecting with the reasoning I will EVENTUALLY get to that closet full of kits I promised I would finish...sigh.. I also worked at hobby store for awhile so got to see the wonderful evolution of kit design such as the individual track links. Seeing the photoetching for the Mogami reminded me of a guy I knew who sand the panels down on Revel plane kits and with a scriber re-etch the panel lines back in. Still love the hobby, great for learning patience and it comes with a sense of accomplishment when you finish a kit, specially when you go the extra mile and do the fine detailing or better yet the conversions.

  • @AkosJaccik
    @AkosJaccik 4 роки тому +9

    I feel your plight. I had the box of the model of my "favourite tank" 38(t) in 1:35 sitting in the corner of my room forgotten for maybe ~7-8 years. Now that the quarantine forces me to find new, creative ways to flee from my responsibilities, I opened it up and started working on it. ...unfortunately, the kit was made by Alanger in ~1992 or so, thus it's a teacher's wet dream when it comes to presenting in exactly what kind of ways can someone screw up an injection molding. Weird design decisions, nothing fits, no line is straight, no plane is flat, holes are filled with plastic, other places are caved in due to thermal shrinking, and of course, I don't have putty nor can I really go out for it. Currently I'm watching UA-cam videos on how to commit seppuku properly.

    • @tullskull
      @tullskull 4 роки тому

      I would honestly suggest you think about selling them all and getting the new Tamiya. you are going to have so much grief unless you enjoy trying to bring them up to today's standards. Also rooms don't need to be sweltering for kits to gradually warp over time.

  • @Grinder_2112
    @Grinder_2112 4 роки тому +29

    FYI, Friulmodel ATL-137 tracks work with the Meng BMPT. Less fiddly bits and in my opinion, Look much better than the plastic tracks.

    • @mikhailzavarov4958
      @mikhailzavarov4958 4 роки тому +1

      Never saw the point in metal tracks when theyre the part youre going to weather the most and cost at least double the price of some aftermarket alternatives like trumpeters workable track kits

    • @MechaNick767
      @MechaNick767 4 роки тому +4

      @@mikhailzavarov4958 Friul does give you a better sence of realism when it comes to weight and slack of the track. Ever the more present on german ww2 vehicles. Even though track tension is one of our hosts fortay. Weather the weathering will hide anything or not doesn´t matter. for it applies to slidemolded tracks aswell. Also, you won´t get injector pin marks on metall tracks.

    • @mrb692
      @mrb692 4 роки тому

      Mikhail Zavarov If it costs double the price but saves many hours of work, you can still come out ahead.

  • @zackthebongripper7274
    @zackthebongripper7274 4 роки тому +2

    As a life long modeller (with my share of bad kits that I have built) I have a saying: "life is not worth wasting on bad kits."

  • @TheStonePanda
    @TheStonePanda 4 роки тому +39

    Finished a model CV-6 Enterprise a couple months ago then bought a model USS Missouri. I've been tryna find the motivation to build it but between other priorities in life I can't find it :(

    • @Ranger_Brutus
      @Ranger_Brutus 4 роки тому

      I recently finished a USS Missouri 1944 model kit and plan on making a model of the 1991 Desert Gulf War version of USS Missouri, after that I debate on either getting a Wasp class LHD, USS Forestall, or a USS Enterprise CV-6. I tend to do warships more than tanks

    • @christophersmith8316
      @christophersmith8316 4 роки тому

      Without the Missouri your poor Enterprise can never finish the war with all your Japanese Models. Let the Boys come Home!

  • @tahunkwai5979
    @tahunkwai5979 4 роки тому +24

    24 hour mogami model built stream!

    • @MrRenegadeshinobi
      @MrRenegadeshinobi 4 роки тому +5

      I second this idea

    • @TheChieftainsHatch
      @TheChieftainsHatch  4 роки тому +22

      @@MrRenegadeshinobi Probably closer to a 96 hour stream.

    • @tahunkwai5979
      @tahunkwai5979 4 роки тому +6

      @@TheChieftainsHatch But in the great words of Shia LaBeouf JUST DO IT!

    • @timtheskeptic1147
      @timtheskeptic1147 4 роки тому +1

      Try two weeks. The etched parts that come with the kit are hassle enough and he's opting for super detailing. But the planes... I will never build another ship model that has more than two float planes on the stern.

    • @Kernozenko
      @Kernozenko 4 роки тому

      He will maybe get a railing or two done.

  • @johnrettig1880
    @johnrettig1880 4 роки тому +1

    Some 58 years or so .....
    Is when I started to build model kits not only that but my Mom taught me how to read with the instructions .
    Back then each kit had a history and complete paragraphs with step by step instructions .
    Now I'm retired 62 and I'm still at it building several kits at the same time . I do it this way for a reason . I pick out the kits that need the same color .
    I also rotate assemblies to pre paint and assemble to other parts .
    Now getting to your statement .
    Yes model building can be very relaxing . Unless you're missing a part or two . And have to wait for a week or two , to get replacements .
    Or as you get further along you realise that you just ran out of the glue or paint and your hobby shop is closed until Tuesday . " some shops are closed on Sunday and Monday " .
    Yes it can be very relaxing .

  • @Jay-ln1co
    @Jay-ln1co 4 роки тому +10

    "When do I have time to do this?"
    That is a question I've heard from every person who owns miniatures. And their significant others.

  • @magecraft2
    @magecraft2 4 роки тому +5

    Wednesday a modelling video from both Jingles and Chieftain, turns out today was a good day to sit at home and do sod all after all :)

  • @jamesnigelkunjuro12
    @jamesnigelkunjuro12 4 роки тому +74

    Yeah, this is why I about 80% of my kits at home are 1/35 Tamiya Armor. I'm in my late 20s and even I can't stand the super-hyper-incredibly-detailed kits some companies are pushing for (a trend first started by Dragon, but taken up by Meng and all the rest). If you're not a super-detailer, Tamiya gives you almost everything you need in a kit. Academy has thankfully chosen to go down the same path - a lot of their recent armor kits are easy to build while retaining a good amount of detail. I just make it a point to AVOID buying kits made in the 90s or older unless it's tamiya. A lot of manufacturers now (academy, trumpeter, etc) made their start copying good kits in the 90s and thus released some godawful kits. AVOID 90s TRUMPETER KITS WITH A WHITE BACKGROUND LIKE THE PLAGUE. (That includes the K1A1!).

    • @biffroberts5906
      @biffroberts5906 4 роки тому +10

      Agreed. Tamiya kits are plenty detailed enough and the parts actually fit together. And price wise, they are a better deal.

    • @donvanduzen8944
      @donvanduzen8944 4 роки тому +1

      There were exceptions like the JS-3M

    • @Deathbyreality1
      @Deathbyreality1 4 роки тому +3

      To each their own I guess as long as Dragon and MENG keep doing what they're doing im happy.

    • @jamesnigelkunjuro12
      @jamesnigelkunjuro12 4 роки тому +3

      @@Deathbyreality1 Oh definitely. The fact that there is a diverse amount of kits nowadays is a great thing. I have a couple of super detailed Dragon kits in my stash too (the ones with 1000+ kit parts not counting tracks) and enjoy building them on occasions where I want a challenge. However, sometimes some kits just take things a tad bit too far (like with the tracks on some Meng kits. I don't mind complex assemblies but having 6 part pieces when 1-2 would do the same job kills my enjoyment on assembly).

    • @jamesnigelkunjuro12
      @jamesnigelkunjuro12 4 роки тому +1

      Yeah, they tend to be cheaper in a lot of areas (in fact there's a Tamiya factory in our country [the PH] who makes a lot of the international shipments of kits for Tamiya]. I do hear some folks elsewhere complaining about price - I guess importation and taxes substantially raise that in some places

  • @SFCDaddio
    @SFCDaddio 4 роки тому +1

    Big tip for photo etched parts that need to be bent into shape - get a miniature anvil, a razor blade, and the #21 blade for an exacto knife. Anvil + dowel rods (or the horn of the anvil and hand wrap) for curves. But the idea is place the part on the anvil, use the razor blade to set the bend line, and then slide the #21 under the part and lever it upwards. You know better than I do metal likes to flex back, so make sure to over bend. Also make sure (not a problem in Texas I assume) the working temp in the room is warm. Too cold and it gets hard to bend, and could fracture.

  • @SC457A
    @SC457A 4 роки тому +1

    I have been blessed/cursed with the model building since I was a kid. I have gone through various stages, cars, planes, tanks, ships, space ships, blah blah. I spent huge time on a CVN-65 Enterprise from Tamiya with P/E up until about 90% completion. A furry member of the household knocked it off the table. Then tried to repair... then later got knocked off again from a different table. Now I have 3 closets filled with my stash, and no where to build them... 1/350 Yamato will be my masterpiece.

  • @galtur5241
    @galtur5241 4 роки тому +65

    I'm glad that i "only" got into Warhammer 40k, that is enought headache for my taste xD

    • @fulcrum2951
      @fulcrum2951 4 роки тому +7

      If the emperor had a text to speech is canon

    • @tahunkwai5979
      @tahunkwai5979 4 роки тому

      @@fulcrum2951 no way really

    • @fulcrum2951
      @fulcrum2951 4 роки тому

      @@tahunkwai5979 really

    • @zaynekauffeld2073
      @zaynekauffeld2073 4 роки тому

      @@fulcrum2951 really really?

    • @CallanElliott
      @CallanElliott 4 роки тому

      Yeah, I couldn't hack this shit, even with the comparably simple 40k miniatures, I was really putting work in if added optional details like grenades.

  • @TheStugbit
    @TheStugbit 4 роки тому +3

    Finally we get a video on the Osorio! Can't believe it. Many thanks, Chief! Let's see how's the thing inside!

  • @bbcmotd
    @bbcmotd 4 роки тому +1

    I love building tank models in Lego. It's always fun to upgrade and modify when you have ideas and you build it from scratch rather than premade parts

  • @Stukov961
    @Stukov961 4 роки тому +2

    I'm not a real scale modeller myself, I'm just doing 40k. That said, I'd recommend the scale modeling thread on the something awful forums. It's filled with incredibly talented and knowledgeable people.

    • @corvusboreus2072
      @corvusboreus2072 4 роки тому

      Back in the day I used to buy 1/32 WWII kits (mainly kraut stuff) and cannibalise them to build 40k ork vehicles.
      However, codex creep and brand snobbery meant I ended up turning my back on the GW cult.
      Nowadays I mostly play WWII in 1/72 scale using 'chain of command' rules, which is a much cheaper and more satisfying wargaming option, but I do sometimes miss the sheer anarchic pleasure of freeform frankenstein kitbashing.

  • @dennismartin7406
    @dennismartin7406 4 роки тому +4

    The Chieftain talking about my hobby, my life is complete.

  • @Rommel_209
    @Rommel_209 4 роки тому +48

    I almost had the entire set of Pz.IVs series....
    Until my cousins stole them when I was away at college 😒

    • @lord_vader6545
      @lord_vader6545 4 роки тому +2

      That sucks...

    • @sumvs5992
      @sumvs5992 4 роки тому +1

      Maybe if you didn't make model versions of them now, they'll be less inclined to steal from you

    • @MrHFam-st4ni
      @MrHFam-st4ni 4 роки тому +3

      wtf.... how could they

    • @fulcrum2951
      @fulcrum2951 4 роки тому +4

      As what Dracula from grim adventures of billy and mandy say: "maybe if you didn't make your babies so delicious, Dracula wouldn't have to eat them"

    • @Rommel_209
      @Rommel_209 4 роки тому +9

      My parents & aunts were like "It's just toys, grow up", and yet my older brother had action figure collections and they encourage him.....

  • @HamilkarBarkasScaleModelling
    @HamilkarBarkasScaleModelling 4 роки тому +2

    Its great to see the scale modelling side of you as well, because i think that being interested in tanks and scale modelling are two things that often come together, as can be seen with people like Steven Zaloga or yourself. I love the historic, technical and tactical aspects of tanks and other military vehicles and my way to deal with that is to do the research and then build a model of a particular tank. And the crafty side of this affair is neat too :)
    By the looks of that truely massive PE set by Flyhawk for your Mogami i would assume that you have to indeed remove a lot of the molded on detail on the plastic deck and rebuild it with the PE parts more or less entirely. That is just a guess though, one would have to thoroughly study the instructions to be sure. That is about as crazy as model ship building can get! Maybe it would be better to sell on that PE set and get instead a few useful goddies for the ship, like metal barrels for the main guns and PE parts for the railing. That should be less intimidating and more enjoyable in the end. Just a suggestion.

  • @seanmalloy7249
    @seanmalloy7249 4 роки тому

    What you need for the deck detail is a class of tool referred to as "modeling chisels"; basically, they're small chisels that come in various widths that you use much like a plane to carve down raised detail that will be replaced by the detail on the photoetch. The small size of the modeling chisels allows you to be more selective about removing surface detail than with sandpaper. Another possibility is a fine grinding tip on a rotary tool like a Dremel.

  • @asher6192
    @asher6192 4 роки тому +12

    I got this notification well, building a model of the HMS victory.

    • @nickbrough8335
      @nickbrough8335 4 роки тому

      Serious rigging.

    • @DavidSmith-ss1cg
      @DavidSmith-ss1cg 4 роки тому

      That should keep you busy for a day or so.

    • @asher6192
      @asher6192 4 роки тому

      Yes it will
      I am excited, though.

    • @mugofbrown6234
      @mugofbrown6234 4 роки тому

      I do like the cartoon of the "Model of HMS Victory, may require some assembly." Out of the box falls a log.

    • @garydahlstrom1684
      @garydahlstrom1684 4 роки тому

      Nice to hear about your Victory. I decided that building the Heller 1/100 HMS Victory out of the box was too straightforward...I turned it into a pirate ship. Painted in a ghastly glow-in-the-dark green, I lit the gundecks and a few of the cannon muzzles with LEDs & added motion-triggered sound effects controlled by an arduino board. A temporary eye condition stopped me after the standing rigging, but i have to get back to the sails and the running rigging. I'm very familiar with the kit; if you have any questions, feel free to ask. I hope you enjoy building cannons.

  • @Arbiter099
    @Arbiter099 4 роки тому +7

    simultaneously this video says to my brain, "I should take up modelling" and " I should not take up modelling"

    • @Masada1911
      @Masada1911 4 роки тому +1

      Arbiter099 you had a very similar experience to mine

  • @robertlapadura5553
    @robertlapadura5553 4 роки тому +1

    Oh God, can I relate to "...it's a hobby, right!". I feel your pain!!! My recommendation, especially on the PE on the Mogami, use what you want! Yes, I know...the Flyhawk (or Lion Roar, I forget) has all this amazing detail...which looks great in the box, and it cost a pretty penny. But, just because it's there, doesn't mean you have to use it...it's not a test. Personally, I have a true love/hate relationship with PE, and aftermarket in general. Yes, when done correctly, the results are amazing; but if you, like me, take a kit down from the shelf, open it up, and say "what a great kit...I'll never finish it in my lifetime!", I guess it defeats the purpose. I have the fortune/misfortune of knowing many excellent modellers, and that's a whole level of anxiety unto itself! Bottom line, if it ain't fun, and it ain't work, you're not going to do it. Love the content, keep it up!

  • @victorriga348
    @victorriga348 4 роки тому

    Keep building man, Tamiya kits even 20 years old are pretty nice and rewarding! Don’t let the rivets counter haunting you, build that Tamiya ship from the box it will be a master piece and throw those bloody 1000 pc tracks to the bin. Anyway it’s always a joy to watch your vids, looking forward to the next one!

  • @mikep3180
    @mikep3180 4 роки тому +39

    Meng kits are over engineered imo , and good luck with that PE, at least it ain't in 1/700

    • @jasperb9233
      @jasperb9233 4 роки тому +4

      Meng kits are fantastic, not over engineered at all. Very impressive details and a nice kit to build. I do agree that the tracks are a bit overkill tough. They should at least include vinyl tracks to give you the option.

    • @crazytrain7114
      @crazytrain7114 4 роки тому

      There is plenty of photoetch for 1/700th!

    • @pickeljarsforhillary102
      @pickeljarsforhillary102 4 роки тому

      Their Whippet is awesome.

    • @MrHaus-ih3nn
      @MrHaus-ih3nn 4 роки тому

      Oh trust me, if you think Meng is over engineered, then bronco kits are practically full size rockets lmao. I bought one of their 1/35 m24 chaffee kits, looks incredible but my god it took a long time to build

    • @acidous
      @acidous 4 роки тому +2

      @@MrHaus-ih3nn you've clearly never build any of the 1:72 modelcollect modern russian tanks/BMPs with cage armor. Made from individual photoetch bars. And didn't try to paint them with brush.

  • @hevis6638
    @hevis6638 4 роки тому +27

    A question: What's your take on the USMC plan of getting rid of their tanks by the end of the decade?

    • @francissullivan6400
      @francissullivan6400 4 роки тому

      What???

    • @Elldallan
      @Elldallan 4 роки тому +9

      @@francissullivan6400 Yes, the USMC announced that they're going back to being a truly amphibious force again, without all the kit for fighting the whole war from the beach to 3000 miles inland, so they're dropping their heavy battalions(tanks) police, and other stuff and significantly downscaling their airwings.

    • @gso619
      @gso619 4 роки тому +7

      @@Elldallan Possibly a stupid question, since I'm not american, so I'm not too familiar with how the marines work, but why did they have all that shit in the first place? Cause every time I've heard about the USMC it kind of just sounds like a small army inside of your regular army, rather than a branch.

    • @Elldallan
      @Elldallan 4 роки тому +16

      ​@@gso619 No such thing :) And for the record I'm not american either. The Marines have always had tanks in the era of tanks, and tbh I think that they do need some, but not all that they have.
      And the answer is basically mission creep, esp from the Afghanistan War, they needed heavier units for the type of war they were fighting there and so they got a whole bunch more tanks and apc's, but it's historically not what's been their mission.
      They're supposed to be a rapid deployment amphibious force that can establish and hold a beachhead while heavier forces are rolled in.
      Yes the US Army is basically an Army.
      The US Air Force is basically an Air Force.
      The US Navy is a Navy and an Air Force.
      The Marines is an Army, and an Air Force __within__ the US Navy XD

    • @Elldallan
      @Elldallan 4 роки тому +2

      @@gso619 Some reading if you're so inclined
      www.stripes.com/news/us/marines-to-reduce-force-by-12-000-decrease-artillery-units-and-get-rid-of-tanks-in-10-years-1.623471
      warontherocks.com/2019/10/a-striking-new-vision-for-the-marines-and-a-wakeup-call-for-the-other-services/
      warontherocks.com/2019/12/notes-on-designing-the-marine-corps-of-the-future/

  • @rezaleon7453
    @rezaleon7453 4 роки тому

    My very first ship was a 1/700 USS Missouri with PE, and those PE railings almost drove me to insanity, but the end result looked pretty nice along with the rough diorama I built for it, good luck on those kits!

  • @richfinds8222
    @richfinds8222 4 роки тому +1

    Every video is hilarious! I know the pain of changing track pads on warrior IFV, usually on a Friday afternoon! I think you could review your food shopping and it would be funny.

  • @jertber
    @jertber 4 роки тому +6

    "Oh! A gun barrel!" :)

  • @JPCR95
    @JPCR95 4 роки тому +8

    Hey, Chieftain! Since you mentioned the EE-T1 "Osório" could you make a video talking about it?

  • @prjndigo
    @prjndigo 4 роки тому

    Small drawn leather tools that are like cheese knives are great for getting started on removing surface details like the rails on that deck. Also you can re-purpose a two-rail tile cutter as a shim-adjustable-height router platform for dremels and other special equipment like record-player-motor sanding wheels.

  • @NigelsModellingBench
    @NigelsModellingBench 4 роки тому +1

    Those Meng tracks are a dream to put together, i've done a few and some video on how to do it. As for Mogami, i would suggest looking at the images on the box front. One shows the aircraft deck and you can see the pe panel fitted to it. As a rule of thumb, you are correct, cut away any detail that doesn't have a hole to protrude through.. note I said CUT, not file as in some cases you are expected to keep the raised plastic moulding and stick on top of the PE afterwards.
    P.S. I'm currently building a Tamiya 1/16 M4 105 Howitzer RC model on my channel if you get bored?

  • @maxsmodels
    @maxsmodels 4 роки тому +3

    I build (dig the name of my channel). Aircraft and armor. I actually do videos of them. I just did a history video on Tamiya.

  • @mrkeogh
    @mrkeogh 4 роки тому +7

    To paraphrase Vince Gilligan: "I enjoy having built models..."
    The actual building can suck balls. At least neurosurgeons have a patient that heals themselves. Scale models are far less forgiving 😉

  • @axtmann
    @axtmann 4 роки тому

    The look on your face as you recall the number of M1 track links is priceless.

  • @fredorman2429
    @fredorman2429 3 роки тому +1

    It’s relaxing unless you’re obsessive compulsive. In 1984 I went to the national archives in Washington DC and photographed everything they had on the Curtis BF2C1, an obscure, unsuccessful Navy fighter bomber, (when they still let your fingers do the walking through the stacks).

    • @4Vlad
      @4Vlad 11 місяців тому

      I recently went to a vintage / classic tractor show and ended up taking loads of photos (even though it was pouring with rain) of the Ferguson TE-20's that were on show so I could add more detail to the Heller kit that is under my settee waiting to be built.
      Bonus pics were taken as I also found a Bedford O series truck to help me with the EMHAR Recovery Truck that is occupying my spare time (and sometimes driving me to distraction!).
      Don't get me wrong...love working on the truck but I am my worst enemy for not just finishing it as per the box lid...I have to complicate matters by adding extra details which of course take extra time (for example: adding floor boards underneath the metal deck which carries the jib, using Letraset dry transfer lettering (from the 1970s) for alternative signage on the body, etc.
      No wonder the truck isn't finished yet!
      Fun, yeah, but in bite size chunks!

  • @abisairuiz8312
    @abisairuiz8312 4 роки тому +6

    I've gotten into flames of war

    • @blondknight99
      @blondknight99 4 роки тому +2

      Me too! Theyre so tiny I can barely see them.

    • @abisairuiz8312
      @abisairuiz8312 4 роки тому +1

      @@blondknight99 but nothing beats the feeling of finishing them and looking at how good they look

    • @treyspencer1659
      @treyspencer1659 4 роки тому +1

      Admiral boss I love setting all my tanks out on a table and just sitting back. FOW and TY are great games.

    • @nicolivoldkif9096
      @nicolivoldkif9096 4 роки тому +1

      I have way more FoW then I ever need...

    • @przemekkozlowski7835
      @przemekkozlowski7835 4 роки тому

      It has been announced that there will be a World Of Tanks miniature game that uses the Flames of War tank models

  • @deathman2549
    @deathman2549 4 роки тому +4

    well I am looking to start, I was watching another youtuber who was explaining everything and he recommended teh 1:48 scale tamiya kits for their ease in building. Are there any you recommend to a complete noob?

    • @SosoTheCircusBear
      @SosoTheCircusBear 4 роки тому

      As a fellow complete noob who barely got into modeling last year I can safely say that you should try and avoid plastic tracks. Implying you are building a tank model of course. Try to get a model that has rubber tracks instead of plastic ones.

    • @jabblybennett3265
      @jabblybennett3265 4 роки тому

      deathman254 Try one of the older 1/35 Tamiya kits as they are easy to put together so a great way of learning the basics without spending that much money.

    • @Riceball01
      @Riceball01 4 роки тому

      If you're into sci-fi at all, Bandai makes some nice and easy to build kits. They make a lot of snap togethers that come together quite nicely and some are even pre-painted so you don't even have to paint once assembled. They famously made their name with Gundam kits which come something 3 ranges from fairly basic and not too large, too quite large and super detailed. They also have the license for Star Wars and make a lot of different Star Wars kits, most of these are completely pre-painted.

    • @jabblybennett3265
      @jabblybennett3265 4 роки тому

      Riceball01 The Bandai kits are very nice but I’m not sure you learn much about how to build ‘normal’ models. I also believe that due to a dispute over licensing with Revell the kits get shipped from Japan. It’s a big delay at the best of times, now it’s probably lot worse.

    • @schlookie
      @schlookie 4 роки тому

      Yeah, your mate is right. Tamiya 1/48 afvs are nice, and the older cheaper Tamiya 1/35 afvs while not too detailed compared with current standards, are easy to build and cheap to pick up. If you like aircraft, the Hobbyboss 1/48 P-51D Mustang is a simple and cheap beginners kit. In 1/72 Academy's 1/72 range of WW2 aircraft are cheap and fit together nicely. Also Eduard's 1/72 range of Spitfires, Bf-109s, FW-190s and Hellcats are nice to build and cheap too - if you get the weekend editions. I cut my teeth on all of these once I got back into the hobby.

  • @sketchesofpayne
    @sketchesofpayne 4 роки тому

    My first models were snap-together kits from the Hill Air Force Base Museum. A P-40 Warhawk and an SR-71 Blackbird. I still have them in a box way in the back of a closet.

  • @erikakurosaka3734
    @erikakurosaka3734 4 роки тому +1

    Funny thing when i first started and completed a scale model, my first model as a beginner was MENG leopard 1A5 with its individual track links. Didn't realize how "hard" it was until my second model kit Tamiya Type 74 introduce me to the "difficulty" level of model kits... and i completed my Leo 1A5 without any prior experience lol

  • @sqaudseven
    @sqaudseven 4 роки тому +5

    Omg he's lost it! Jk interesting discourse from the usual.

  • @brumby92
    @brumby92 4 роки тому +9

    This is kinda like getting into simulation computer games. You send more time setting up gear than you do playing.

    • @thurin84
      @thurin84 4 роки тому

      try getting into assembly require miniatures games.......

  • @tharos
    @tharos 4 роки тому +2

    Me: Boy, with this quarantine, it's sure a great time to get back into scale modelling! I have so many fond memories and barely any of my kits survive!
    *watches video*
    "...on second thought..."

  • @doncarlton4858
    @doncarlton4858 3 роки тому

    The most satisfying part of modeling was when I took musty, dusty old builds out of the cellar and into the back yard and proceeded to place firecrackers in stacks, turrets, etc. Great fun! 😂

  • @tnbspotter5360
    @tnbspotter5360 4 роки тому +3

    The relaxing part comes when you sniff the glue.

  • @TheSgruby
    @TheSgruby 4 роки тому +4

    Scale Modelling is great relaxing hobby until you drop that one small parts and you gone spend next half day swearing and cursing on whole world looking that little sh**.

    • @werbinich7908
      @werbinich7908 4 роки тому

      Or you drop something and don’t notice it and later step on it... RIP 1/35 mil mi 24 cockpit

  • @shawnkelley9942
    @shawnkelley9942 4 роки тому +1

    Thanks Chieftain. I have been modeling for over forty years now. It helps with my ADA. It doesn’t matter how it looks when it’s finished all that matter is that you had fun. Start with the easy kits. And if they come out crappy. You can always put a firecracker in them and lite them off after all the this stuff passes by. Keep safe everyone and happy modeling.

  • @somand88
    @somand88 4 роки тому

    Please do more video on this subject. Laughted my ass off in seeing you frustrated like everyone i know in this hobby.

  • @vaoinas
    @vaoinas 4 роки тому +3

    Stop being a wuss about the tracks, dude - it's not that hard, especially when having a jig in the box. At least these are not the rubber bands, you find in some of the kits now and then.

  • @thomaswilloughby9901
    @thomaswilloughby9901 4 роки тому +1

    Building model tanks as a teenager got me into the Army as a tanker long ago. I have been a modeler for over 40 years, build on commission won some competitions and have kits in museums. I am not a fan of individual links especially for tanks with no slack in the tracks. Photo etch is fine for adding detail but often involves more work replacing kit pieces which are just fine to pad the amount of etched and the price. A well molded deck if well painted can look almost as good as the wooden replacement decks and saves $100. I really enjoyed this video, good idea. You should see the parts count on the AFV Centurion MKIII but it has band tracks thank the Lord.

  • @frankryan2505
    @frankryan2505 4 роки тому

    My first ever PE work was a gun shield for a German 3.7mm flak gun (sat on a sdkfz)
    Was so bloody proud about this thing. little foot stirrups, brackets and grab handles, it was honestly display perfect.. Until I knocked it off the table. I abandoned the kit at that point, didn't have the heart to go on..
    To be fair, it's not like many modellers have a shortage of kits in their stash.

  • @uheng1997
    @uheng1997 4 роки тому

    On the deck and photo etch there are two ways to do it; 1) use the sprue cutter to snip off the deck projections and then file of what little remains or 2) get a Dremel and grind of the projections. Both methods work fairly well, but the first method leaves less to grind/file and thus is less messy/dusty. Use a face mask when grinding though. Also, you'll find that many of the super detail sets are all photo etch, so if you think track pads are bad wait til you try to build an all photo etch AA gun! In the future look for detail sets that include resin or 3D printed AA guns.

  • @chrisbisho9785
    @chrisbisho9785 10 місяців тому

    I've been building models since I was a kid in the UK in the 60's . I continued when we came to the US in the mid 70's where choices were much more plentiful for sure . I slacked off somewhat after joining the military but still dabbled a bit . When I was stationed in Korea in the mid 80's I used to get the squadron mail order flyer in my PO box so once a month I'd get a money order , assuming there was anything left after the usual stuff and running the Ville , fill out the form and have the stuff sent to my parents house . I ended up spending 2 years in Taegu and when I got back there was a fairly significant stash of kits and supplies at my folks place . After 15 years I got off active duty and joined the Nevada Guard where I built a model of our M-1 / T-80 Vizmod that ended up on the Generals desk . Now I'm in my 60s and retired so I spend most of my days at the bench . My stash of kits is now large enough that I'll have to live to about 140 to build them all . Just living the dream !

  • @charlesemerson6763
    @charlesemerson6763 4 роки тому

    My fathers 85yrs old and he still builds 1/350 ship kits. It was a therapy thing for him when he got ill in seventies. Now he's just started his first tank, Tamiya Challenger 1mk3. He also bought a Merkava and an Abrams. So you just have to bite the bullet, sit down and get started. Plenty of online help for those etched kits. I prefer the protos wooden decks, easier to fit. Try Fruil or MasterClub for the tracks for the Terminator. They are white metal tracks but it's the relaxing part of the build for me. Can't see 1/72 so 1/48 or 1/32 for planes.

  • @swwy5
    @swwy5 4 роки тому

    Up until this past February, it had been 50+ years (Jr High) since I assembled a plastic model. I have jumped in with both feet, air brush, compressor, paint and assorted tools. My first project is a 1/35 Tamiya M4A3E8. Kits have certainly changed since the 60s.

  • @Kablemodem
    @Kablemodem 4 роки тому +1

    I used to build kits when I was a kid until I graduated high school. My mom let me convert a large walk-in closet into a modeling workshop. My unrealized goal was to build every military model that Tamiya made. I did build a lot of AFVs, some planes, and I made a few nice dioramas. My masterpieces were the 1/350 scale Bismarck and Yamato. I haven’t touched a model since 1986. In the 90s I started acquiring vintage Revell 1/32 scale aircraft kits off eBay that I planned to build some day, but they still sit in the garage. My love for scale models was replaced by computer war games. I did that for a few years until I got into competitive shooting. Now all of my time is spent attending matches or reloading ammunition. I do hope to get to those kits someday - maybe I’ll have the time when I retire.

  • @oni101
    @oni101 4 роки тому

    I liked building them, and have built dozens. Started in the late '60s. In hindsight it was mostly educational. Things like where are the hatches? Which way do they open? How far can the gun elevat/depress? How did the wings fold and landing gear retract? You know, things like that. Built a model M60A1 and superdetailed it (meaning kitbashed) the interior Breach, turret floor, seating, etc. sights (ever seen a Norden tank sight or a 60 with a Ferrari engine?[hey, its a twelve cylinder too and the 24/35 scale conversions made it fit-ish]) and hid a pearl and diamond necklace inside it. Then sent it to a girl I knew who lived in Chicago (I was stationed in Erlangen W. Germany) under the guise of "now you will know what I am talking about when telling tank stories." The best kit I ever built was the 80's Testors/Italieri M47 kit. Track was PERFECTLY molded with gaps between the blocks and the center guides and end connectors in the proper place in relation to the blocks. flexible and one piece each. An idea-- bribe your kids to build the track FOR you! Once, again in the 80's, we were doing an aircraft ID class and the NCO accidentally had let a F105 Thunderchief in the slide show. I ID-ed it right away. EVERYONE was shocked including the officers. I simply said "Hey I built one as a model once." Most were brush painted and did not look GREAT but the assemblies and size ratios were right. Like I said, educational.

  • @thx113868
    @thx113868 4 роки тому

    Glad to know you are a Plastaholic too. I have hundreds of models.
    Right now I am working on a M8A1 in 1/35 scale.

  • @everydayhero5076
    @everydayhero5076 4 роки тому

    I'm right there with you. I have 4 kits I'm working on right now, although not at the same time. Get bored with the King Tiger, then go to M4A3E8. Waiting on paint to dry on Jagdpanther, then go work on Pz IV H. I have so much time right now I may get one of them finished. Good luck with the tracks, they are going to take longer than the model to put together. Photo-etched is nice and worth it in the end but is an absolute nightmare, depending on what you're doing. Get a good lighted magnifying glass with alligator clips that attach to your desk (not the clips, the magnifying glass). Oh, when you're doing the photo-etched parts Mr. Metal Primer is the best for painting metal and actually having it stick to your parts. Good luck to you, sir. May God have mercy on your soul.

  • @petesheppard1709
    @petesheppard1709 4 роки тому

    Scale models was my main hobby from grade school through college. For me, it was the escape. As a matter of fact, I got through a conditioning hike at Marine Corps OCS by imagining working on a 1/72 AH-1 Cobra! It also cost me part of my vision, as I am left-eye dominant and during my growth years strained it into serious near-sightedness, while my right eye uncoupled and retained excellent distance vision. For my Marine Corps physical, I was 20/10 in my right eye and 20/100 in the left. In actuality, my brain has balanced them out nicely, though simple age is starting to take its toll.
    Like you, I drove my dad to distraction by not only buying modeling stuff, but magazines to read about all the cool models I couldn't afford and the pure art that people made them into.

  • @terrygardner3031
    @terrygardner3031 4 роки тому

    I feel your pain. By the time I left for College I had 208 1/72 scale airplanes from the second world war. Those were the 3rd generation of most of the aircraft. I started about age 8. back then the kits were only 50 cents I remember the B17 being 2.00 so I had to save for a couple of weeks to get it. By the time I had gotten to gen 3 I had finally gotten an airbrush and was starting to become particular as to paint schemes. Sadly my parents placed all the planes in boxes stacked upon each other and I was only able to salvage a few. I do however still have over 26 aircraft yet to be built and 5 or 10 that are partially built. I got to picky as to exactly what you are discussing being super detailed. Good luck and don't give up, even tracks can be relaxing if you let them. I'm just now in my 6th decade and starting to get back into obtaining my kit to start a new building program. At least now they have the reference manuals that let you see the paint schemes to paint them by.

  • @Knallteute
    @Knallteute 4 роки тому

    You forget that you as a UA-camr bring would bring us joy if you ramble about anything. I speak for propably many of us when I say that you are really good at narrating and bringing story's to live. Also there are a lot miniature builders but not a lot of them talk while the build progresses in the background what makes them relatively boring for me. Keep up the good work and you and your family shall stay safe.

  • @quattobeast
    @quattobeast 4 роки тому

    A fair point is made in the video. Spend a few extra dollars on that Tamiya kit or other high end plastic. They fit better, require less filler and sanding, and keep you actually building and painting.

  • @SpacePatrollerLaser
    @SpacePatrollerLaser 4 роки тому +2

    Back in the '50's the detailing was done with paint. Also, we did not have that detailed a model from the companies like Lindberg, Revell and Renwal, so those who did high detail took it on themselves. I would suspect that all that detail in the tank track assembly is their so that the wheels can actuall turn

    • @Riceball01
      @Riceball01 4 роки тому

      You don't need realistically constructed tracks for the wheels to move. Normally, with model tanks, the tracks are made from a soft plastic so they will roll over the wheels quite easily. The main drawback (that I can think of) with the single piece model track design is that for vehicles that don't have return rollers or have tracks that aren't normally tensioned that tightly, one piece tracks don't tend to droop realistically and you'd need to do something to create that droop.

  • @HootOwl513
    @HootOwl513 4 роки тому +1

    Meng the Merciless, geez. I was once confronted by an Esci 1/72 M-1 Abrahms kit -- each track link around the drive sprockets was individualized. [But not the whole tracks.] Since I was just modelling to get wargaming pieces [before video games, mind you], I wasn't into superdetailing. I took sufficient lengths of the long tracks and pressed an impression into plasticine clay -- making a mold. I then shot strips of black RTV over the impressions and smoothed down. 24 hours later, after some Xacto knife trimming, I had tracks which I secured with scotch tape. Doubt you could get away with that trick in 1/35th, however.

  • @zerstorer335
    @zerstorer335 2 роки тому +1

    I've got one model that hasn't been touched since around 2002. College got in the way, followed by jobs, moving, and not having a spare surface available for me to use to work on my hobbies.
    I finally have a desk and air conditioned room to use, now, so the key is to successfully abandon enough of my desire for perfection to let the building be relaxing.

  • @Circa88
    @Circa88 4 роки тому

    Building scale model tanks always results in a "Significant Emotional Event", so I stick to planes. Just got done with Revell's Junkers Ju-87G-2 Stuka, and it's amazing.

  • @RedwihteGame
    @RedwihteGame 4 роки тому

    I've just started with plastic 1:35 models. I also collect Weta and Sideshow statues. And who could forget the ever growing Hot Toys collection? I have more boxes than things. And let’s not forget the humongous LEGO Millennium Falcon still in-box. Oh, and all upcoming releases!
    Collecting is “relaxing”.....

  • @stevieRay3211
    @stevieRay3211 4 роки тому

    Kit reviews prior to purchase and/or aftermarket replacement tracks can be your best friends.

  • @robertbrantley4634
    @robertbrantley4634 4 роки тому

    Thanks for a great post. It's good to hear honest comments from older modelers. I build for me and me only. I don't spend time super detailing a cockpit then gluing on the canopy that hides all of that lovely detail. For each his own.

  • @AdamMann3D
    @AdamMann3D 4 роки тому

    I love that you're a kit guy. It brings a certain type of joy (in theory). I was lucky enough to hang out with Zaloga at World Model Expo in Chicago in 2017. Hearing him go off about old kits is as crazy as hearing him talk about any ordnance.

  • @irondog068
    @irondog068 4 роки тому

    I build 1/700 scale 1941 era Battleships with PE and wooden decks. (Except for the 1914 USS Arkansas and 1925 USS Florida, she was my Great Uncles ship at Veracruz and the Great War). As for rigging, don't get wound up doing all the rigging, just "what looks right". I also use an elastic type of line used by model railroaders for phone lines. I just got the super detail kit for the 1/700 scale Prince of Wales. For the photo etch deck (if it is like the PoW), you are to scrap every think off and the super detail kit will have the bits to put on. I said screw that and bought a wood deck. Hunter makes very nice decks and the wood has holes for all the bits on the plastic kit deck. They also give you real chain to replace the plastic models molded chain. Good luck and good hunting

  • @feltonfolder420
    @feltonfolder420 4 роки тому +1

    I paint most of my models with a half used brush, my moms old professional grade acrylic paint, green painters tape and a retracting utility knife. So dont feel to bad.
    Also i do a lot of large wood tanks in my spare time.

  • @Chicolini19
    @Chicolini19 4 роки тому

    Hey Chieftain! To answer your Mogami question, yes, you have to remove all the raised parts on the deck to add the photo etch on top. It is a lot of extra work cutting and sanding, and then re-building the parts you just removed from scratch. I’m much like you in that I don’t have the time to include building day to day in my life, and I found that when I do, most of it is spent removing molded on bits, sanding, adding one photo etch part, and then scratch building the bits I removed. The progress on 1/700 ships is suuuuuuuuper slow. Check out Ebroin’s Miniatures YT channel where he’s currently working in a super detailed 1/350 tirpitz. He shows you all the techniques and additional steps he gotta do to add photo etch and other details.

  • @davidquak4398
    @davidquak4398 4 роки тому

    I am building the 1/350 Haruna by fujimi (for the past 2 years) and its a battleship so bit different deck arrangement then a cruiser. But there are some brown linoleum deck parts i had to paint also. I used vallejo model air 70.846 for this. You can paint it on unlike tamiya or gunze. So i painted the edges and then airbrushed the rest. It really helped me a lot.

  • @DeinonychusA
    @DeinonychusA 4 роки тому

    I used to do scale modeling, but as of late I've been doing only LEGO-style tanks, ships, and aircraft from companies like Cobi, Panlos, Xinbao, Gudi, etc. Every once in a while I think to myself "Perhaps I should get more advanced again and go back to scale modeling."
    Then I remember all the "fun" you just brought up and happily return to my easy, clean, and simple bricks.