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MR2Don

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Posts posted by MR2Don

  1. This may not be a highly appreciated comment, but I find that the better quality builds at these scales are, the more the eye gets deceived into thinking it's looking at the real thing, and hence the slightest "imperfection" starts to look terrible.

    But, please, for God's sake, don't think I'm criticising what you're doing, I've just got to get my head round what I'm actually looking at. At 1/32 scale, this thing has to be over 2 foot (old English measure) long.

    It's fantastic!

  2. On 3/23/2020 at 5:36 PM, rs2man said:

    Finally , if you want to use the chrome parts from the original version of the kit rather than the custom parts , the chrome sprue is bright on one side and satin on the other

    The 1/12 Lola T70 that I've nearly finished now is the same. There were two different types of plating. Some parts, for example the outer wheel rims, were in a satin chrome all over; the shiny bits are as rs2man has found, bright one side, satin on the back. I pretty much stripped them all (don't like over-shiny chrome) and found that the shiny side had a sort of transparent sub-coating on the sprue which was quite gloss in itself, needed a gentle scrape to get a good surface for cementing.

    I've got the Porsche 934RSR to do at some time, will see if that's the same.

  3. 2 hours ago, Windy37 said:

    Great , well built model . Always have mixed feelings about weathering model cars  , mainly because you spend so long getting the decals on right , then they get covered over by the weathering effect . Yours looks good , because the colour scheme is still clear for all to see. Nice one ! 

    Although, to be nearer realistic, the back end should be solid, filthy brown, that's where all the crap goes!

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  4. 7 hours ago, rs2man said:

    My first car was a Marina, although it was the later model with the spotlights in the grill and the blow moulded spoiler (it was a '79 T reg)  :)

    Although mine was the lowly powered 1.3 not the mighty 1.8 twin carb monster as in the kit

    Many, many years ago my section leader at work had a 1.8TC. It was in a colour that we lovingly referred to as "pig poo yellow" (and that's the polite version) - you know the one I mean!😉

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  5. It happens. I lost the top triangular section of my SU-27 front undercarriage leg. I'd taken it off the sprue to check how it fitted in the fuselage, then put it to one side until required. When that time came - absolutely vanished; turned the whole room upside down, no sign.  Had to scratch one from plasticard, using the sprue image in the instructions to get the dimensions, successfully.

    Of course, once the plane was fully finished and painted, it decided to show up!

    • Like 2
    • Haha 1
  6. If I'm reading it right, that registration (T50 GT), as per MoT History, doesn't exist, so that's no help, but... if you read it as TSO GT, then we've got it, it's a Marcos TSO. In fact, if you Google Marcos TSO, there's that photo courtesy of pinterest.

  7. 10 hours ago, stevehnz said:

    especially in the depths of a forest in the wee small hours

    Yes, good old night stages. Quiet, sweet smell of pine and then high pitched roars, on and off the throttle, flash of lights and quiet again.

    The other, of course, was Scottish Rally day stages; run early June when it always seemed to be warm and dry, the result of which was so much dust that, after the first half dozen, you couldn't read the entrant list in your Motoring News.

    Ah, memories!

    • Like 1
  8. Very good. First time I saw one of those for real was in Clipstone Forest, way back when they had just appeared on the rally scene. There was this almighty howling noise, then this "thing" in Alitalia colours appeared going flat out and vanished just as quick. What the "F" was that! The world soon found out!

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  9. Hmm, very tempting, but could require a row with the wife as I'm already under review for having Tamiya's Porsche 910 (built), Lola T70 (wip) and Porsche 934 (goods in) and living in a relatively small terraced house with an amateur artist, i.e. not much room for display.

    • Haha 2
  10. 1 hour ago, galaxyg said:

    I also like the real car a lot,

    The number of people I come across who either say "I knew somebody who had one of those" or "I always fancied one of those". Note the past tense - still a few of us out there, but getting rarer. In Chelmsford, with a population approaching 100k, there are, I think,  four MK2s that I know of, two or three MK3s and no MK1s - unless anybody else knows different.

  11. 1 hour ago, Martin1962 said:

    Most of the chromed parts were unusable and had to be stripped then sprayed

    Interesting point! I'm battling through a T70 at the moment and can see very little of it staying "chrome"; there's even two version in the kit, shiny and matt. Outer wheel rims can, I think, can stay, but everything else, mainly because of flash lines and sprue gates, need to be stripped and painted. I've also noted that the "shiny" parts still have a glossy finish left after the plating is off (using dilute bleach) which is not keen on liquid poly and needs a gentle scrape.

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