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#16
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I was thinking more the lessons learned on how NOT to do it - at least then it's only a few pounds "wasted". Quote:
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Voitures-Françaises 'R' Nous ( そして日本語 ) und jetzt der neue Ringmeister "Thank god I am not -What-" |
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#17
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^Haha I already have a 356 Speedster, R33 GT-R and Europa in my to-do list.
![]() But, spi-ti-tout, if you are looking for a specific car that you want to model, I would say go for the best calibre model you can find. Otherwise what henk said is very helpful. ![]()
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TOYNBEE IDEA IN KUBRICK 2001 RESURRECT DEAD ON PLANET JUPITER Last edited by Esperante; 08-11-2005 at 11:52 AM. |
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#18
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![]() Dubai is crap when you want the really good stuff, especially when it becomes car-related. What would be a good "starting kit" brand? I already know Tamiya and Fujimi are hi-class so any other ones I should try? Quote:
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![]() J/k ![]() The thing is liek I already mentioned kits here are rare and generally expensive, and I'm getting this one as a gift, otherwise I don't think I'd have one. I'm (and as Pieter knows ) broke and saving ALL my money for my (hopefully) trip to the UK next year (otherwise I've got enough to buy about 2 kits now so plus the gift one that makes it 3) And SAYING THAT, the point comes to the fact where it's also highly unlikely that I'll be able to get any furthur kits unless people suddenly start loving me very very much Quote:
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Any suggestions guys...........? Oh and thanks for all the help ![]() |
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#19
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Allo....
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#20
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If paint leaks under you might as well repaint the section that the leaked paint reached. Just don't use too much paint and try a fine enough brush. In my opinion, brushing is better because you don't need to mask up all the body, but there is a higher chance paint will leak. Normal masking tape works too. If it's hard to tell where the trim is, first trace over with a black sharpie pen, although leaks sometimes come off using a toothpick.Sorry if it doesn't really work. This is just advice and I'm just a kid(no expert at this stuff). when I tried this, it worked perfectly(as long as the paint leak isn't too big) |
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#21
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Great to see some useful tips! I'm about to start a decent 300sl model and will definitely use the masking technique. So far I've been a big fan of the tried-and-true "cut half the bristles off the brush and use a razor blade as a backstop" technique that works about half the time.
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