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Maybe I'm getting old. Maybe I'm just looking for something to complain about.

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  • Member since
    December 2003
  • From: Indiana
Maybe I'm getting old. Maybe I'm just looking for something to complain about.
Posted by hkshooter on Friday, January 15, 2010 2:28 PM

But I have to rant for a second.

In the last couple of weeks I've observed on two different occasions people complaining about faults or problems they see in kits that arent even on the market yet!
They see CAD drawings or sprue shots and find things wrong with the kit. OMG, give me a break!!!
Nowhere is the manufacuter complimented for working on new kits for us. Nowhere are any positive things mentioned about the kit, like what's right about it.
No, people with lots of time and no lives are pouring over drawings and test shots looking for something wrong.
It's unbelievable and sometimes, like today, it makes me want to scream. Why can't folks look at the positive and be happy that we are able to build models at all. Why can't they be happy that manufacterers are releasing new kits and putting forth the effort to offer products that are improvements over past products.

These things I see make me all the more happy to read posts like the recent post in A/C about kit price limits and some of the comments made there. Doing it the old fashion way with the meager offerings available. And being happy to do it.
I swear that if a company gets the shape right, someone will b###ch about the cord. If they get the cord right someone will b###ch about the hinges. If they get the hinges right someone will b###ch  about the fabric detail. If that's right they'll b###ch  about the stitching detail. If that's right they'll complain about the wrong fabric detail was used. Because everyone knows that they didn't use malaysian cotton on the plane in the month of production, it's obviously supposed to be Egyptian cotton!
It all really makes me like certain folks less and less.

Does it affect me directly? Nope. Will I lose sleep over it? Nope. Will I model inspite some microscopic detail being incorrect? Yep. Will I model over some BIG detail being incorrect? Yep.
But d#mn, people, why can't we just love the hobby? Build models without stressing ourselves over insignificant things like fabric detail or length being off a scale farking half inch.
Or better yet, not extend the annal stress out into cyber oblivion in order to have others stress over it.

Not long ago I read a post (not here) where someone was stressing HUGE over a detail on a plane. They went into this big detailed post about what was supposed to be wrong with the kit and wanted the forum public at large to tell them what they should do about it. The kicker? One of the last lines in the post was something like "I really can't see a problem with it but...."
They admitted they can't see the supposed problem but were all worked up over it and wanted someone else to tell them how to fix what they couldn't see!!! That's a sure sign that none of the kit/manufactering bashing is doing anyone any good.

Now that I've vented I feel much better. I hope you've smiled at my own ranting about something not being quite right. But it's something I think about from time to time. And now, I'm going to go grind on my 1/48 SR-71 that everyone knows is just the most perfect kit ever produced.Wink

  • Member since
    August 2006
  • From: Neenah, WI
Posted by HawkeyeHobbies on Friday, January 15, 2010 3:34 PM

I'm with ya on this my friend. Why is it that the negative comments and attitudes are the loudest and most heard? The vocal minority in this hobby are making it uncomfortable through this new conduit of communication...the Internet and forums such as this one.

I have taken my lumps  Black Eye on other forums trying to stand my ground to express my viewpoints. There are those who though agree with me, will not share the pain on the cross of public opinion They do share their feelings with me privately. I'm glad I am not alone in my opinion!

Someone recently shared with me his opinion as to why these people bash kits.The Internet gives them a security otherwise not afforded them in a face to face environment. I wonder how many knuckle sandwiches would be served had some of these people been in the same room while having the same controversial conversations?I'd probably deliver a few. Wink

So this hobby of ours becomes a relief mechanism...a check valve. Anyone can create an alias identity and speak as they feel regardless if it shows a lack of respect for others, including mfrs, distributors and retailers. You don't like something fine, address it in the proper way...direct it to the source don't dwell on it here in a public forum. I for one get tired of hearing the tirades over and over again. If the product isn't to your personal liking okay, it is however to millions of others. Your "perfect" model will come in time and who knows maybe even at an affordable price.

A good example of a company that is apparently doing it right is Wingnuts. Has anyone heard of anyone bashing their products before they hit the streets? Not that I have heard. Why. Because these guys didn't go around bashing others, they went and proved it could be done. So to those who belly ache and complain about the imperfect kits...go do what they did...show us how it is suppose to be done! Quit being a forum bully and put up or shut up already.

You know...what if we had the ability to look at each person before they were born to see what they looked like and how they would act? Nope not this one, it has fatal flaws!!! No I wanted a boy not a girl or vice versa. You got the nose too big. The toes are splayed too far. How many of those we hear complaining would be around to do so? Whistling

The only way to eliminate these conversations is for the mfr to cater to their every whim, but that is an impossible feat. You can not be all things to all people. Or heavily moderate these forums...have a penalty system in place...with warnings, suspensions and revocation of membership. The technology is in place to block IP addresses.The hosts have that right, you are here at their pleasure. But as they say the blade swings both ways it would cost something.

So we must persevere to endure, thicken our skin and learn to ignore those which try to steal our joy. Slip on your rubber boots and prepare for a little rain...or someone pissing on your shoes. Angry They aren't leaving anytime soon unfortunately.

 

Gerald "Hawkeye" Voigt

http://hawkeyes-squawkbox.com/

 

 

"Its not the workbench that makes the model, it is the modeler at the workbench."

  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: Sonora Desert
Posted by stikpusher on Friday, January 15, 2010 4:00 PM

I agree with you guys 100% and then some! In the end, I do like it I do in real life when a supervisor at work goes on about some incident that occured and I was not party to.... tune it out and go about my business. I am always happy to see new releases. I may not be able to afford most of them these days, and really could care less about some tiny detail being wrong, I just like seeing what can be done. I just wish it could be done less costly. Thats what a big stash and ebay are for...Whistling

 

F is for FIRE, That burns down the whole town!

U is for URANIUM... BOMBS!

N is for NO SURVIVORS...

       - Plankton

LSM

 

  • Member since
    February 2003
  • From: Panama City, Florida, Hurricane Alley
Posted by berny13 on Friday, January 15, 2010 4:34 PM

I agree.  When Monogram first released their century series of 1/48 scale aircraft I jumped on them as soon as possible.  I bought several of each only to later read some of the reviews on each kit.  Not a single positive comment on them.  The shape of this is all wrong.  The shape of that is all wrong.  To me they looked good, so I tuned them out and continued to build them.

The 1/48 scale RA-5C from trumpeter has had more negative comments than good.  I could care flipping less if the shape of the nose isn't 100% correct.  To me it looks just fine.  So what if the tail cone isn't correct.  How much sleep am I going to loose over that one?

If I am going to build a kit of an aircraft that I know inside and out, I'll take the time to fix what errors can be fixed and leave the rest alone. 

This same topic came up about five or six years ago on this site.  Some one commentd that some people tear a new kit apart so they can be first in line.  They can then say," I told you so".  They get enjoyment out of being the critic of bad things.  They can dish it out but they can't take it. 

I am in this hobby to enjoy it, not work my self into a heart attack.  I very seldom pay much attention to these type of people. 

Berny

 Phormer Phantom Phixer

On the bench

TF-102A Delta Dagger, 32nd FIS, 54-1370, 1/48 scale. Monogram Pro Modeler with C&H conversion.  

Revell F-4E Phantom II 33rd TFW, 58th TFS, 69-260, 1/32 scale. 

Tamiya F-4D Phantom II, 13th TFS, 66-8711, 1/32 scale.  F-4 Phantom Group Build. 

 

  • Member since
    August 2006
  • From: Neenah, WI
Posted by HawkeyeHobbies on Friday, January 15, 2010 4:47 PM

Bernie,

Looking back how many of those imperfect model won contest and are proudly displayed that were built essentially OOB? Probably most of them even if they were so badly flawed. I guess people don't appreciate what they have as much anymore. Sad isn't it.

Gerald "Hawkeye" Voigt

http://hawkeyes-squawkbox.com/

 

 

"Its not the workbench that makes the model, it is the modeler at the workbench."

  • Member since
    May 2005
  • From: Left forever
Posted by Bgrigg on Friday, January 15, 2010 4:59 PM

I call it "Keyboard courage". People are a lot braver when they can hide behind a nickname on an anonymous forum. I've always tried to conduct myself as if the person I am communicating with can reach over and punch me on the nose.

People who only complain, do so as it builds up their esteem, or so they think. It's one reason I just scan reviews. I'm looking for obvious and gross errors in construction, I don't really care if the wingspan is off by 2". In the scales I prefer to build in it is quite moot. I care if there are gigantic warp and fit issues.

So long folks!

  • Member since
    March 2005
  • From: near Nashville, TN
Posted by TarnShip on Friday, January 15, 2010 7:00 PM

I would be tempted to agree except for one thing

the Wildcat was corrected

the Bf-109 got a new canopy and people can get the corrected part if they already bought the kit

Kinetic attempted to fix the F-16 nose

and just today, there are new pics of the Dragon Bf-110 with the correct slats for the leading edge

so, the companies have/do listen, and sometimes fix the parts

kinda funny in a way, always reading that everything is "close enough",,,,,and then buying mags with cool builds of how to do a sub type of plane from an existing kit or kits,,,,,,,that -6 Cougar, for example,,,,,I really enjoyed seeing how to do one for my shelves,,,,if "close enough" was my only option,,,,,,,a -8 with -6 decals would have done it well enough,,,,,,,instead we got treated to an article to "do it right"

reviews aren't supposed to be shill adds for products,,,,,,they are supposed to point out mistakes,,,,or they are not credible

almost gone

  • Member since
    August 2006
  • From: Neenah, WI
Posted by HawkeyeHobbies on Friday, January 15, 2010 10:45 PM

Its one thing to say a kit has a problem with the shape of this or that. But its another to rail on the manufacturer and shout to the world this kit is fatally flawed and unbuildable. Dragon's P-51 though not perfect still was a bargain kit. It was big, it looked like a P-51 and they sold out more than one production run of it...and release other variants which also sold. It was a fun build.

I think what upsets most people is the choice of words used to describe the overall quality of a kit. Fatal is just that dead...can't be revived. DOA. Even the Sham Wow guy isn't as blatant as some of the posters we see posting their opinions of quality and what manufacturers should do to satisfy a small minority of consumers.

All those kits from the 50's, 60's, 70's and on are still in demand. Whether they are being requested as rereleases or just finding a long OOP kit on eBay to satisfy a craving for them. If they are so bad then why do they still appeal to so many, flaws and all?

I agree a review should point out mistakes, but remember these are still in the category of TOYS. If you want museum quality then one needs to look into building some of those expensive and exact museum grade models...that is if they are willing to shuck out hundreds of dollars to finally get a kit that is indeed accurate.

I met a modeler who has only ever built Tamiya kits. He says kits like Revell and Monogram are not quality  models. What he really said in volumes to me was (and he actually agreed later) that his skills as a modeler are not sufficient enough to build them. The other fact he admitted to was he wasn't doing it for fun, just something to do. When I queried why then does he do them, he again admitted he doesn't do anything crafty well at all and he hates fishing. He is of the type of personality that only works with the [ ] .

I think what is best is that everyone ease back on both sides.

Gerald "Hawkeye" Voigt

http://hawkeyes-squawkbox.com/

 

 

"Its not the workbench that makes the model, it is the modeler at the workbench."

  • Member since
    March 2005
  • From: near Nashville, TN
Posted by TarnShip on Friday, January 15, 2010 11:03 PM

I'll ease back, no problem

joined 4 1/2 years ago, less than 40 posts,,,,'back' is where I normally am

but, I also have almost all of the plastic I "need" for my collection, too

I only need one more Fujimi A-7 for the intakes, and one more Falcon conversion for the Canopy,,,,,,then I'll have what I need to fix both of the TA-7's I was soooo happy to have ordered,,,,,,and soooo sad to have seen when they got here,,,,,,,the parts to fix those are the same parts I could have used in the first place to do the conversion

but, that's not what's important,,,,,,it's only money,,,,,,,,it sure would be cool if someday there was a "peer preview" system for new kits,,,,,ironing out things ahead of time, before the final molds were cut,,,,,,that would eliminate most of the outcry at release time

almost gone

  • Member since
    December 2003
  • From: Indiana
Posted by hkshooter on Saturday, January 16, 2010 12:15 AM

After thinking about it for a while and reading the posts here I think I have figured out what bugs me so much about the kit picking (get it?? hehe)
Like some have alluded to, I believe there is a certain small minority of folks who feel like there is some kind of unspoken competition to find the first problems or error in a new release. They think if they find it first and post it first then they are somehow the *REPORT ME!!* of the rock, to be awed by everyone around. They feel they must demonstrate their higher intellegence of the subject in order to prove themselves. or maybe they are compensating for something else...
In a nutshell it's arrogance. And I loathe arrogant people. In the end it's not the act of the nit picking, it's the arrogance of the picker. "Hey! look at me! I just found 57 stiches in this 1/35 scale figures ruck sac instead of 56! Where's my medal?" I wonder how long it's been since that guy built a model anyway?

It's to bad others stress about the pickers follies. And it's to bad a manufacterer may delay a release and spend a few thousand more to fix something tiny and then charge us another $10 on that $100 kit. Know what? Like Gerald said, if a company made a perfect kit it would cost hundreds if not thousands of $. And the first thing someone would do is complain that nobody could afford it.
I have to chuckle sometimes.

A note here about reviews. I believe there is a need in the industry for the review as long as the review is honest and straight forward, provides correct info and points out areas of the kits to watch for while building the kit. IMHO, in box reviews are worthless as I don't care what it looks like in the box, how many bags the sprues are in, how big or well printed the instruction sheet is. I want to know how well it's molded, how it fits together and what problem areas to look out for when I build it. And to provide that info someone has to build it. 
A good review is a valued resource but I don't have much faith in them in general. It's been my own experience that reviews can be outright worthless at times and at their worst, lip service to the manufacterer. I don't believe for a second that if a kit sucks and the reviewer says it sucks and tells you why, that said reviewer is going to keep getting free samples for long. So I tend to think most of them are sugar coated to a point.
There are some folks who put right in their reviews that they paid for the kit out of their own pocket and I find that respectable.I tend to give those reviews more merrit.

So, I'm done now.
That's all I've got to say about that. Now where'd I put that DA sander???

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Fort Knox
Posted by Rob Gronovius on Saturday, January 16, 2010 7:49 AM

Folks want to be the first. The first to point out an error. No one wants to give a kit the thumbs up only to have a Johnny Comelately expert point out an obvious (to that Johnny) mistake. Therefore, everyone wants to be able to find a fault or two so that when Johnny points out an error, the other Johnny can toss an error in his face that he missed.

  • Member since
    November 2008
  • From: Biding my time, watching your lines.
Posted by PaintsWithBrush on Saturday, January 16, 2010 9:58 AM

Perhaps the "kitpickers" are merely fulfilling a need to project an image of themselves as "History Heavyweights", whose knowledge of a particular subject is over and above that of mere mortals.

That, or they have too much time on their hands.

A 100% rider on a 70% bike will always defeat a 70% rider on a 100% bike. (Kenny Roberts)

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Fort Knox
Posted by Rob Gronovius on Saturday, January 16, 2010 10:22 AM

Actually, I think it is a form of jealousy. Having lived the life of an unpaid online reviewer, I think a lot of guys who have more expertise in various subjects wonder "why is this guy getting to review a hot new kit for free and not me?"

Many feel they do not have the writing skills to write reviews (have you seen some of the posts folks write, they border on illiterate). A well written substandard review is more likely to get printed than an expert review written by Mr. Can't Spell who thinks grammar is what Yankees call their grandmothers.

Likewise, I have seen hot new kits passed off to modelers who know so little about the actual vehicle that the review seems like a waste of electrons.

I've even been in rather inane heated arguement with a person asking me to review an item that I politely turned him down. It was a 1/72 scale Tiger or Panther resin engine set. I tried to tell the person that 1, I didn't have the kit that the item would be used for (no way to see if it fit), and 2, that I had no personal knowledge of the subject nor did I have any references that I could even base an opinion on.

After he tore into me (accused me of having an agenda against him and called me some choice names), I mentioned the above reasons for declining again and basically told him that other than giving an opinion that it looked like an engine to me and commenting on the quality of the casting, I would have no other useful information to provide in a review. I told him I wouldn't know the difference between a Tiger, Panther, Panzer IV, or King Tiger engine or if any of them were even the same or all different.

Embarrassed, he slinked off and I've not heard from him in years.

  • Member since
    March 2007
  • From: Northeast WA State
Posted by armornut on Saturday, January 16, 2010 10:40 AM

i myself have several kits in my stash that don't meet the approval of some die hard rivet counters and haven't built them for fear of the "oh thats the wrong tail shape "or "the glacias plate on that version has 14 button rivets not twelve bolts" and of course we all know that the internet never lies and the pictures posted of historical subjects are the absolute truth and the particular varient shown was the one that went into production with thousands rolling off the lines.face it( I MEAN NO DISRESPECT FOR THOSE FOLKS)unless you ate, slept, or otherwise were intamate with that particular subject , ya don't have a leg to stand on.personally i'm amazed at the technology this hobby has come to and simply overwhelmed with the choices that are now available,i look forward to all the stuff to come and if its a kit with issues i'll wait for someone to produce a better kit. long story short  joe public eyeballing the contest table at the LHS isn't going to care or possibly know the difference,if it makes you happy build it,if it's wrong fix it,if ya can't fix it live with it,if ya can't live with it leave it in the box and let thoseof us who aren't concerned with absolute accuracy enjoy the hobby for what it is.  a great way to spend the afternoon dreaming about activities we couldn't take part in(jet fighter pilot,racing across the dessert in a 60 ton behemoth). KUDOS to the companys and engineers involved with just simply making 500+ pieces fit together close enough for someone to bellyache that there is a 1/1600th gap in a tough spot to sand. we're modelers its what we do. 

we're modelers it's what we do

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Fort Knox
Posted by Rob Gronovius on Saturday, January 16, 2010 11:06 AM

I've often used this analogy, but the level of detail a person is willing to accept is often like the guys who take care of their lawns. You may like to keep it cut, adding those cross stripes with perfectly manicure edging, etc. Your next door neighbor may just cut as quickly as possible, rarely edges his sidewalks and doesn't weedwhack along his chain link fence. Neither one of you is cutting your grass wrong, you just like to do it to different degrees.

  • Member since
    November 2008
  • From: Biding my time, watching your lines.
Posted by PaintsWithBrush on Saturday, January 16, 2010 1:31 PM

Rob Gronovius

I've often used this analogy, but the level of detail a person is willing to accept is often like the guys who take care of their lawns. You may like to keep it cut, adding those cross stripes with perfectly manicure edging, etc. Your next door neighbor may just cut as quickly as possible, rarely edges his sidewalks and doesn't weedwhack along his chain link fence. Neither one of you is cutting your grass wrong, you just like to do it to different degrees.

Good example. At the end of the day, isn't the opinion of the purchaser/builder the most important any way?

A 100% rider on a 70% bike will always defeat a 70% rider on a 100% bike. (Kenny Roberts)

  • Member since
    September 2015
  • From: The Redwood Empire
Posted by Aaronw on Saturday, January 16, 2010 5:53 PM

hkshooter

A note here about reviews. I believe there is a need in the industry for the review as long as the review is honest and straight forward, provides correct info and points out areas of the kits to watch for while building the kit. IMHO, in box reviews are worthless as I don't care what it looks like in the box, how many bags the sprues are in, how big or well printed the instruction sheet is. I want to know how well it's molded, how it fits together and what problem areas to look out for when I build it. And to provide that info someone has to build it. 
A good review is a valued resource but I don't have much faith in them in general. It's been my own experience that reviews can be outright worthless at times and at their worst, lip service to the manufacterer. I don't believe for a second that if a kit sucks and the reviewer says it sucks and tells you why, that said reviewer is going to keep getting free samples for long. So I tend to think most of them are sugar coated to a point.
There are some folks who put right in their reviews that they paid for the kit out of their own pocket and I find that respectable.I tend to give those reviews more merrit.

So, I'm done now.
That's all I've got to say about that. Now where'd I put that DA sander???

I actually like in box reviews because they tend not to get bogged down in subjective details (one reviewers minor clean up is anothers gallons of putty needed). They tend to be short and to the point, this kit offers 3 decal options and can be built as an early or late model xyz. Parts are crisp and well molded, test fitting of major parts appears to be good overall. It includes a moderately detailed interior and a pair of nicely detailed radial engines.

That is really about all I need from a review.

  • Member since
    July 2013
Posted by DURR on Tuesday, January 26, 2010 9:56 PM

i think part of it may also be attitude of the person(s) complaining about the model

if a person states as simple facts they see them

ie         this is not shaped right or this part is too big etc...         rather than the all out attack attitude   (look another disaster from x co nothing fits etc)

every kit has  neg side but   the attitude of the commenter  in my mind has a lot to do with how the post goes        

as some of you me remember the submarine issue of early 2009

  • Member since
    June 2008
  • From: Iowa
Posted by Hans von Hammer on Wednesday, January 27, 2010 12:27 PM

unless you ate, slept, or otherwise were intamate with that particular subject , ya don't have a leg to stand on.

 99% of the folks that have lived with 'em probably wouldn't notice...  For example, crew chiefs don't rivet-count, they just look for empty rivet holes...  Pilots don't even look for that much.. They don't care if an intake's shaped wrong, just that it ain't blocked and nothing's living in there... They don't care if the wings have the wrong slats, they just care that there's two wings...

The other 1% are modelers and they pull out the personal photos, & the handbook copy they stole, and  just fix the kit problem, they don't b*tch about it.. 

  • Member since
    January 2009
Posted by excdn11 on Wednesday, January 27, 2010 4:37 PM

This might be like cuss'in in church but, I want a model to be as accurate as the next person but that is not why I build them.  I enjoy this hobby because of where my mind goes while I am at the bench, totally concentrating on what I am building.  Memories of air shows and who I attended them with, aircraft that I have always loved or maybe movies that I have seen all come to mind.  So it is not just the depiction of an aircraft, it is the journey I take to get there.     

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Fort Knox
Posted by Rob Gronovius on Thursday, January 28, 2010 7:03 AM

I agree with Hans, having served on, in and around modern US armored vehicles for the last 27 years, I notice errors, but I either fix them or live with them based on how much I "care" for the subject I'm building.

I'd pick a well-fitting, nicely engineered kit with some inaccuracies over a dimensionally accurate kit that was a bear to build and fit like crap. Another modeler may feel just the opposite and enjoy detailing the more accurate kit.

That leads us to my original analogy that just because we have different tastes, doesn't mean we do it wrong.

  • Member since
    November 2009
Posted by Static Addict on Friday, January 29, 2010 5:30 AM

These "kit pickers" are the same people who sit down at a $4.00 breakfast buffet and complain the hashbrowns aren't seasoned properly.  My guess is modeling kits are not the only things in their lives that fall short of their impossible expectations.  I feel sorry for these over wound people.  I feel very  sorry for their children.  My 2 pennies.

 

Static.  

"Any Port in a storm"
  • Member since
    October 2007
  • From: Scotland
Posted by Milairjunkie on Friday, January 29, 2010 6:21 AM

I do look at the occasional "In the box review" but dont really pay much attention to them other that what variant does the kit produce & what decals it has.

I do look at build review in the same way as others have stated, so that I am aware of any big issues or stumbling block's during construction. I find this pretty handy on the occasion when the kit instructions have construction in such an order that it make things more difficult than needs be.

Not such a big deal in the US, but here in the UK the Airfix TSR.2 has suffered quite bady from many severe bashings, with the bashers quite openy asking why Hornby purchased Aifix to continue to pump out "crap". Sure the intakes dont align, the wing doesn't sit properly, the nose profile is incorrect, some lower scribing has been placed the wrong way round, some scribing is imaginary, the nose has an imaginary mid length taper, the canopies are slightly to wide.......................... SO WHAT - most of this is correctable. Even if it wasn't correctable, with the exception of an exotic & expensive rare resin kit, what choice is there - none.

I for one am delighted that Airfix chose to release the TSR.2, the rapid sell out of the 1/72 (damn) kit suggests that there are plenty others just like me. The 1/48 version I am finishing at the moment had the "huge issues" the bashers pointed out, but for me it has turned into an enjoyable & nice build - so Airfix & all the rest, please continue on & produce kits, even if some do have warts!

I belive many of the bashers are just sad gits trying to prove they know more about a specific subject than the the next guy. On occasion I have seen bashers buying a flawed kit, buying a load of PE & resin to correct & superdetail the kit - but still turning out fecal matter - you have to laugh.

  • Member since
    January 2007
Posted by the doog on Monday, February 1, 2010 12:53 PM

hkshooter

 believe there is a certain small minority of folks who feel like there is some kind of unspoken competition to find the first problems or error in a new release. They think if they find it first and post it first then they are somehow the *REPORT ME!!* of the rock, to be awed by everyone around. They feel they must demonstrate their higher intellegence of the subject in order to prove themselves. or maybe they are compensating for something else...

Ya took the words outta my mouth here, hkshooter.

I was reading through these posts and thinking "I don't see 'keyboard courage', becauseI don't think it's arrogance; it's the manifestation of that weirdest of human quirks which says to oneself "I must be the best at SOMETHING!" It's the ol' competitive nature, the need to be seen as an authority on something in the community.

I honestly don't even pay attention; in fact, I alomst never read reviews before I buy. I may read them AFTER I own the kit to see if there's anything that I WANT to correct or muck around with. But I could really care less about that slight turret bulge on the old Firefly tank kit, or the "correct" type of tool latches on my Tiger--if they look the part, I'm beaming!

The need for perfection is a curse and a huge cross to bear. We should pity these people who cannot enjoy something which falls short of that brass ring, and marvel at those who make something spectacular out of a "flawed" project.

 

  • Member since
    October 2007
  • From: Scotland
Posted by Milairjunkie on Monday, February 1, 2010 2:10 PM

the doog
if they look the part, I'm beaming!

Well said, my sentiments exactly!

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Fort Knox
Posted by Rob Gronovius on Monday, February 1, 2010 3:10 PM

Unlike Doog, I will take a look at the reviews to see it 1) the kit is worth buying or is it a piece of junk; 2) if there are different companies making the kit, which one is a better; 3) what are the issues with the kit and are they ones in which I can fix or don't care about it issue.

If I just have the urge to build a Panther tank in 1/35 scale and don't care which Ausf. I chose, I will research the available kits, search the buy/sell forums or eBay and get the one that will give me the least hassle at the best price (or deal if a trade). Reviews help me out in this instance.

For an Abrams tank, I know just about everything regarding the available models both past and present. I would search for the one that best suits my needs. I wouldn't need a review to help me decide.

  • Member since
    March 2005
  • From: near Nashville, TN
Posted by TarnShip on Monday, February 1, 2010 5:37 PM

I still don't really get this idea.

If a new kit comes out,,,,and we heap praise on it,,,,,,,isn't that a quality judgement?

or when someone types one of the many "we need a new tool _______ , to replace the FujiFix kit"

anytime says "great model, Rex" (mythical quote, lol),,,,,,,compared to what?

and, some of the guys that worked on the real things did do so with their eyes open, I know I would spot SuperFox intakes on a new A-4 Charlie model from even pre productions photos

I think in a hobby where it's okay to heap praise on a new tooling or someone's build,,,,,,it should be okay to comment on someone designing a new tool with major mistakes

if there is a "top",,,,,there has to be a middle and a bottom,,,,,,,,or we would all still be happy with Aurora and Starfix kits,,,,,,,,instead of waiting for the new Academy F-4B to come out,,,,,the Revell and very oldddd Hasegawa* would have been good enough

*added,,,,,and if Hasegawa themselves thought their F-4 kits were okay in quality,,,,,,,they wouldn't have released 3 different generations of molds,,,,one would have been "good enough for modelers"

almost gone

  • Member since
    December 2003
  • From: Indiana
Posted by hkshooter on Monday, February 1, 2010 11:10 PM

Insightful reply, Tarn.

But as you said in your reply, I'd expect someone to gripe about "major" mistakes in a new kit. Afterall, how hard is it to find good refs on a Mustang or 109?
What gets me is the small stuff. One to many rivets in that line. Length off a scale inch. Something about the nose just isn't right. (love that one. can't tell me what's wrong with it but you just know something is).
What put me over the edge and therefore got my rant started was the fact that someone was complaining about a perceived error in a cad drawing of a sprue in a kit that wasn't even molded yet, not to mention on the market.

Eduard recently sent out it's lovely looking 190 D-9. I saw sprues at the Nats, good looking mold, yada, yada, yada. Will I buy one? Maybe in a few years, I got Dora's comming out my ears already. Is the kit the greatest thing since sex? Don't know. But I bet it will build up to be a fine example of the prototype when done, right out of the box.
But not a week ago I was reading about how the lower wing was molded wrong. OMG!!! They should have gotten that detail right, refs and resources are everywhere!!!
After a few minutes of research I figured out what all the hooplah was about and decided that it might take ten minutes to fix. Big deal. But someone out there had to be the first to point it out, make a big tadoo about it.
This company puts money and effort into making molds and offers what seems to be impossible, a kit better than the ones already avalable for the subject.  And folks have to focus on that one tiny bit that's supposed to be wrong with it right out of the gate. Kits hadn't even shipped at that point.
Are we modelers or not? I say it all gives more weight to the argument that some of us are mere "kit assemblers" and therefore expect the manufacterer to get everything perfect so we can actually build a correct model.

I'm with others who've posted here. If I don't like it I'll fix it. My big hang up is Mustangs and I've corrected many wheel wells. But do I go online in search of the next kit so I can be the first guy in line to scream "oh jumpin gee willikers, they didn't get the wheel well right!!!"
I've got way more important things in my life to stress over. So does everyone else. And this is only a hobby.

  • Member since
    December 2003
  • From: Indiana
Posted by hkshooter on Monday, February 1, 2010 11:11 PM

And BTW, we need a new tool 1/48 SR-71.WhistlingToast

  • Member since
    June 2009
Posted by jimbot58 on Tuesday, February 2, 2010 2:13 AM

I could see someone complaining about a kit that may have major fit issues, but many modelers look to those challenges! I just like to know that the kit goes together well, and looks good. I don't care if the tail fin is 1.7 scale inches too tall. I at least like to know that it is somewhat accurate, with the right exhaust cans and whatnot. My builds may not be 100% accurate, but I built something that pleases me and makes my friends and family go "Oooooo!" and "Ahhhhhh!" A prime example is my recent build of my Italeri SU-27. The markings I used are totally wrong for the color scheme I used, but it looks great to me!

*******

On my workbench now:

It's all about classic cars now!

Why can't I find the "Any" key on my keyboard?

 

 

 

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