Andy...I totally agree with you. I read that as well, and I feel the same as you. I am fairly new to the hobby and guess what? Reading that made me feel like that if my work would be scrutinized to that degree, I want no part of it. I am mostly into the hobby for the fun of it. Yes I want to improve my skills, and yes I want to try and make it a fairly accurate representation of the subject. However, part of it is artistic license. The build is whatever our vision is for the project. It is not somone else's vision, but it is ours.
Is this a trend? A few issues earlier another modeler was somewhat scruitinized for adding rust to portions of the track assembly with his tank build. I think the commentary was titled, Lose the Rust. The writer stated that those components don't rust. I can see education on stuff like this is good, but boy, did I feel bad for the guy that built the model. Here the guy built this beautiful model, and had this nice big layout in FSM. What a cool thing he accomplished on many levels. He must have felt really good about it. Then what. The next issue comes out, and someone says, in essence, hey man, you screwed up! That would have been like a sword right through the stomach. The whole world reads this, and it pretty much nullifies all the good things that this modeler did. Well, he did great in my book!
Frankly, I was pretty disappointed in FSM for putting these comments into their magazine. Or maybe, I am misguided in what FSM is all about. If FSM is about absolute total accuracy, then OK. In that case, however, I might reconsider my subscription when it comes due. I say that not because I am angry about it, I say that because it does not represent what I feel the hobby should be.
Thanks for stepping up on this.
Steve