Absolutely great, thank you!! Just one remark: the paint colour of the wheels. 50 years later we are loosing the memory of the original colours. It was a much lighter and brighter gold. Thank you!
Big work. Congratulations. Allow an observation. The final color of the bodywork is more similar to AlfaRomeo Red than Ferrari Red. I would have used the Pink primer, rather than the Gray primer. Bye, John
Hi. For the various washes for different parts of the model, I basically start with a few mls of Tamiya Acrylic thinner and add to it small drops of colour of Tamiya Acrylic paint to get the shade I'm after. For 'yellow' effects I often use Clear Yellow and/or Clear orange. I usually add Semi Gloss Black as well to give a dirty look. But it's really trial and error. I don't buy or use and pre-made washes. These Acrylic mixes dry very quickly. Hope this helps.
Thank you. The suspension is fixed. Springs are real and the hubs rotate, but I don't think that the soft metal construction of the kit would allow it to articulate.
Hey John, fantastic work!!!! About the rivets. Did you have to buy the rivets separately? Are there slots in the body for them or did you freehand them yourself? I'm interested in the kit but I'm not as talented as you and the rivets scare me a little. Also after painting the body with them on it would seem difficult to be able to polish the paint around them. Cheers!
Hi and thanks for the kind comment. Rivets - yes!! I did buy them all (900+ were needed) but I was fortunate that I found someone selling a load of them and I bought all he had for a good price! - otherwise i don't think I would have done it. The rivet positions were marked (you could leave it as it is, unriveted, and it would still look good), so drilling wasn't too much of a problem - but time consuming. And trimming the rivet stems so they don't protrude inside the bodywork. Don't be put off the build because of the rivets - there were far trickier parts to the build than the rivets! And, there was no problem painting and lacquering after riveting - and any polishing needed was straightforward. If you achieve a good paint and lacquer finish then not much polishing is needed anyway. I'm currently building the 250LM. I won't be doing a full rivet job! Have fun!
Thanks for your helpful reply John. I wonder if there's a home solution for the rivet marks like gluing poppy seeds or something like that, who knows? So that's not the only tricky part of the build, ha? lol. I wish there was more of a selection in available kits for this subject. I have a 1/24 fujimi 330p4. The rivets are tiny on that body and i'm worried about how easy it would be to sand them off during the body prep work. I'll probably start that one soon before I pick up anything else. Once again, thanks for showing the inspiring build! It's awesome! I salute you.
@@jgsu27 Thanks again. I know there are 'rivet making machines' out there, but I've never used one. There are ways of making plastic rivet heads as well. For me, the problem in simply placing rivet heads would be too tricky - I'm not skilled enough - although I know there are plenty of modellers out there who do it, especially aircraft and military modellers. Using actual rivets is far more accurate (for me) - but expensive. With your 1/24 Fujimi kit (which is a fab model) yes, I agree, sanding/prepping the body could easily affect the rivets. But....have fun anyway. Cheers.
Very, very nice. Do you re-paint the aluminum parts or do you finish in some other way? I mean, for example, aluminum-colored cocoon and cooler parts.(1:38-2:15)
Thank you. Most of the metal chassis pan structure is not painted - I sanded it to achieve the finish I wanted and then used a thin wash to add some realism. The cooling parts were prepared in the same way. The 'shiny' engine parts (like the heat shields, oil and fuel tanks etc) were sanded and polished to achieve the finish.
@@tomaszzamiara1180 I already had the rivets in stock ( I had bought them in bulk (at a good price!) - at 6.10 on the video you will see the rivet packets - if you Google MFH P1008 rivets you will see the size of the rivets and where to buy. Hope this helps.
Hi and thanks. The rivets I used can be seen at 6.15 on the video. They are 1mm diam head, 0.7mm diam shaft. I used these because I had a stock of them! I think, maybe, a size a little smaller could have been better - but overall I was happy with the appearance.
Hi and thanks for your kind comment. The floor panels are kept as the original metal kit parts - but buffed to give a slightly dull finish and then black was airbrushed on the tubular parts to give a ‘shadow’ effect. I tried to get a ‘dirty’ metal finish.
@@defenderjohn9972 nice, thanks for the information! I just bought one like this to build and I'm trying to find references and photos. I'm sorry but I have to ask if you have some to help me. Again, congratulations for your work.
Me again, haha sorry for all the questions. Did you have trouble fitting the body pieces like the doors and cowls? Also did you bend any resin parts using heat?
Hi again. It’s a while since I built this model, but if I remember rightly there were some issues with the fit of body panels ( not unusual with MFH) so some reshaping with gentle heat probably did happen, along with careful shaving of resin to achieve a fit. I remember the inner door sills on the body recess were a pain to get right as well. But with patience, care and test fitting it all worked out ok. The metal window frames etc needed a lot of shaping and test fitting. A bit frustrating bearing in mind the cost of the kits, but what I will say is that the end product is really satisfying and MFH are superb and so realistic when finished. I’ve built several newer MFH kits since this one and with each newer kit the build quality improves significantly. Have fun!
Thanks. I get what you mean about your opinion on the rivets (and I have commented on this in a previous question). A couple of things though - the rivets on the 'original' are actually quite prominent - and, the actual bare rivets here are to scale, but of course when you prime and then paint several coats over rivets you start to run into scale problems with paint - paint isn't scale thickness! So, we end up with painted rivets gaining bulk. Looking at the model in real life (which I can do) the rivets look much less prominent than in a photo taken under photographic lighting. Have you tried this drilling/riveting/painting - be interested to know how you deal with it. My model making skills reach a bit of a ceiling here. Cheers.
Absolutely great, thank you!! Just one remark: the paint colour of the wheels. 50 years later we are loosing the memory of the original colours. It was a much lighter and brighter gold. Thank you!
Attention to detail and ability to weather are brilliant.
Thank you
Awesome job the car looks beautiful
Wow 😣😳 this is beyond real man. Magical 😲
Thank you
Absolutely gorgeousssss !! I have about x15 Model factory hiro kits that I collect...only started one !! Amazing work and detail you have put in...
Thanks! It’s one of my favourite kits I’ve built. 15 MFH kits? Wow!! Heaven😀.
So beautiful and legendary! Great job! Thanks for posting!
This is art, looks so realistic. Amazing job
Thank you for your kind comment. The real art is the design of the Ferrari 330 - it must be one of the most beautiful sports cars ever!
Big work. Congratulations. Allow an observation. The final color of the bodywork is more similar to AlfaRomeo Red than Ferrari Red. I would have used the Pink primer, rather than the Gray primer. Bye, John
Well Here I amagain truly amazed by ehat I am seeing John!
Thanks for your kind comment :-)
Absolutely Beautiful Sir!!!
Thank you kindly
Beautiful work!
Thank you!
Absolutely amazing…thank you
Thank you. Much appreciated.
Stunning build
Thank you
Wow. Beautiful work. Thank you for sharing this.
Thank you
Amazing work man. Stunning model.
Thank you
Awesome work..!!
Thank you!
John , one of my Alltim| gave Race Cars!
Excellent!
Fantastic job! Congratulations!
Thank you
Incredible
Thank you
Stunning great job man
Thank you!
Amazing...my congrats!
Thank you for your kind comment.:-)
Superbe !
Obra de arte...
Obrigado! Thank you.
Stupenda complimenti 🤤
Thank you :-)
I understand this was 4 years ago. Curious, how long did this take roughly to build? Its STUNNING!
❤ 👏👏👏
what clear coat?
I am busy building my kit at the moment and im loving it. What wash did you use to get the yellow oil effect on the engine and various parts?
Hi. For the various washes for different parts of the model, I basically start with a few mls of Tamiya Acrylic thinner and add to it small drops of colour of Tamiya Acrylic paint to get the shade I'm after. For 'yellow' effects I often use Clear Yellow and/or Clear orange. I usually add Semi Gloss Black as well to give a dirty look. But it's really trial and error. I don't buy or use and pre-made washes. These Acrylic mixes dry very quickly. Hope this helps.
this p4 runs at le mans in 67 but burned out in the night with amon at weels.....
The year before Amon ‘won’ Le Mans along with McLaren in the GT40 in the famous Ford vs Ferrari battle.
Great work. Does the suspension articulate or is it fixed?
Thank you. The suspension is fixed. Springs are real and the hubs rotate, but I don't think that the soft metal construction of the kit would allow it to articulate.
Hey John, fantastic work!!!! About the rivets. Did you have to buy the rivets separately? Are there slots in the body for them or did you freehand them yourself?
I'm interested in the kit but I'm not as talented as you and the rivets scare me a little.
Also after painting the body with them on it would seem difficult to be able to polish the paint around them.
Cheers!
Hi and thanks for the kind comment. Rivets - yes!! I did buy them all (900+ were needed) but I was fortunate that I found someone selling a load of them and I bought all he had for a good price! - otherwise i don't think I would have done it. The rivet positions were marked (you could leave it as it is, unriveted, and it would still look good), so drilling wasn't too much of a problem - but time consuming. And trimming the rivet stems so they don't protrude inside the bodywork. Don't be put off the build because of the rivets - there were far trickier parts to the build than the rivets! And, there was no problem painting and lacquering after riveting - and any polishing needed was straightforward. If you achieve a good paint and lacquer finish then not much polishing is needed anyway. I'm currently building the 250LM. I won't be doing a full rivet job!
Have fun!
Thanks for your helpful reply John. I wonder if there's a home solution for the rivet marks like gluing poppy seeds or something like that, who knows? So that's not the only tricky part of the build, ha? lol. I wish there was more of a selection in available kits for this subject. I have a 1/24 fujimi 330p4. The rivets are tiny on that body and i'm worried about how easy it would be to sand them off during the body prep work. I'll probably start that one soon before I pick up anything else. Once again, thanks for showing the inspiring build! It's awesome! I salute you.
@@jgsu27 Thanks again. I know there are 'rivet making machines' out there, but I've never used one. There are ways of making plastic rivet heads as well. For me, the problem in simply placing rivet heads would be too tricky - I'm not skilled enough - although I know there are plenty of modellers out there who do it, especially aircraft and military modellers. Using actual rivets is far more accurate (for me) - but expensive. With your 1/24 Fujimi kit (which is a fab model) yes, I agree, sanding/prepping the body could easily affect the rivets. But....have fun anyway. Cheers.
Very, very nice. Do you re-paint the aluminum parts or do you finish in some other way? I mean, for example, aluminum-colored cocoon and cooler parts.(1:38-2:15)
Thank you. Most of the metal chassis pan structure is not painted - I sanded it to achieve the finish I wanted and then used a thin wash to add some realism. The cooling parts were prepared in the same way. The 'shiny' engine parts (like the heat shields, oil and fuel tanks etc) were sanded and polished to achieve the finish.
@@defenderjohn9972 Who did you get the rivets from? What size and type of head?
@@tomaszzamiara1180 I already had the rivets in stock ( I had bought them in bulk (at a good price!) - at 6.10 on the video you will see the rivet packets - if you Google MFH P1008 rivets you will see the size of the rivets and where to buy. Hope this helps.
Nice job, thats an art!
Can you tell me rivet product code?(name)
Hi and thanks. The rivets I used can be seen at 6.15 on the video. They are 1mm diam head, 0.7mm diam shaft. I used these because I had a stock of them! I think, maybe, a size a little smaller could have been better - but overall I was happy with the appearance.
@@defenderjohn9972 Thank you :)
Did you paint the floor panels to get that bare metal look? Its a fantastic job
Hi and thanks for your kind comment. The floor panels are kept as the original metal kit parts - but buffed to give a slightly dull finish and then black was airbrushed on the tubular parts to give a ‘shadow’ effect. I tried to get a ‘dirty’ metal finish.
@@xbn999 That's awesome! i ordered one and it's on the way! can't wait. what buffing wheel did you use for metal? I use normal wool for plastics
Just perfect! The kit includes the round head rivets as well?
Thank you. But, no the kit does not include all the extra rivets. Fortunately I was lucky to be able to buy some cheaply!
@@defenderjohn9972 nice, thanks for the information! I just bought one like this to build and I'm trying to find references and photos. I'm sorry but I have to ask if you have some to help me. Again, congratulations for your work.
fantastic build! does the kit come with the rivets?
Thank you. But unfortunately no - it doesn't come with all those 'extra' rivets. I had a stash of them which I had had for a while.
Me again, haha sorry for all the questions. Did you have trouble fitting the body pieces like the doors and cowls? Also did you bend any resin parts using heat?
Hi again. It’s a while since I built this model, but if I remember rightly there were some issues with the fit of body panels ( not unusual with MFH) so some reshaping with gentle heat probably did happen, along with careful shaving of resin to achieve a fit. I remember the inner door sills on the body recess were a pain to get right as well. But with patience, care and test fitting it all worked out ok. The metal window frames etc needed a lot of shaping and test fitting. A bit frustrating bearing in mind the cost of the kits, but what I will say is that the end product is really satisfying and MFH are superb and so realistic when finished. I’ve built several newer MFH kits since this one and with each newer kit the build quality improves significantly. Have fun!
好靚
Thank you!
Beautiful model but I’ve got to say I think the rivets are too prominent.
Thanks. I get what you mean about your opinion on the rivets (and I have commented on this in a previous question). A couple of things though - the rivets on the 'original' are actually quite prominent - and, the actual bare rivets here are to scale, but of course when you prime and then paint several coats over rivets you start to run into scale problems with paint - paint isn't scale thickness! So, we end up with painted rivets gaining bulk. Looking at the model in real life (which I can do) the rivets look much less prominent than in a photo taken under photographic lighting. Have you tried this drilling/riveting/painting - be interested to know how you deal with it. My model making skills reach a bit of a ceiling here. Cheers.
I could only wish for such a kit from MFH much less assemble it.