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We have read build logs that chronicle all of the problems that many kits have.I would like to hear about kits that have amazing fit and ir detail that you have built.I will start off with my Tamiya 1/48 Gloster Meteor.Every part fit amazingly well and the first plane kit I have built thst required no filler whatsoever.When I applied Zap a Gap and the fuselage seam literally disappeared I was amazed!Has not happened since but it is memorable .Anyone else have similar stories?
I am building Tamiya's SU-122. Its a breeze, all fits perfectly well. Fairly simple kit. Most of my Dragon kits were trouble free as wll. They are complex and detailed but all fits realy well together with minor trimmings here and there.
Hello!
I'd say the new Airfix scooter - building that kit I understood why the people liked the real thing so much:
Thanks for looking and have a nice day
Paweł
All comments and critique welcomed. Thanks for your honest opinions!
www.vietnam.net.pl
That is one sweet looking Skyhawk! Well done!
Can you post a pic of the SU!
BlackSheepTwoOneFour - thanks a lot!
Oh ;
I still don't know about posting pics . Now mine has to be Dragon's F-111 Aardvark .It almost fell together .I certainly wasn't expecting this in 1/144 ! T.B.
My most trouble free build to date is this Hasegawa 1/48 P-47. Very little filler and it mostly fell together. Very detailed OOB...i did actually finish it but this is the best pic I currently have.
I'm finally retired. Now time I got, money I don't.
Believe it or not, it was the Lindberg 1/48 Grumman Goose. Things just fit as well as you could ask for. I messed up the paint and had to strip it and redo that part, but that was not the kit's fault.
www.spamodeler.com/forum/index.php
Mediocraties - my favorite Greek model builder.
Tamiya's 1/48 P-47D Thunderbolt. Simply a remarkable example of styrene engineering. I'm not quite done with it but, let me tell you, it is a dream to assemble.
"Not only do I not know what's going on, I wouldn't know what to do about it if I did". George Carlin
Love dat Goose Lyle!
Gary
"All you mugs need to get busy building, and post pics!"
JOE RIX Tamiya's 1/48 P-47D Thunderbolt. Simply a remarkable example of styrene engineering. I'm not quite done with it but, let me tell you, it is a dream to assemble.
I agree! I'm currently working on the Bubbletop version and do have the Razorback version in my stash. No fit issues whatsoever.
The two that immediately come to mind are Fine Molds' 1/72 TIE Fighter and Imai's 1/72 Thunderbird Mole. The TIE was completed under a week, which is a record for me. The Mole needed zero modifications, which is also a record of sorts. The TIE was very simple, the Mole quite involved, but both assembled with no difficulty and the results were pleasing. Sorry both were built before I got a digital camera, so I don't have any good photos.
“Ya ya ya, unicorn papoi!”
Jay Jay, your luckey on your Hasegawa P-47. Mine has some serious warpage and gap issues where the lower fuselage meets the leading edge of the lower wing... I mean bigtime!!!
All that aside, my best, most troublefree aircraft build without a doubt has been Revell's 1/32 Hawker Hunter. That kit is simply divine to build. I built mine wheels up as a ceiling hanger while overseas and left it behind when it was time to come home...
For armor, it has to be Tamiya's 1/35 Cromwell and Centaur kits (two versions of nearly identical tanks kitted from the same basic molds). Except for their new "gluable" single run tracks, those kits truly are "shake & bake" in their simplicity of asembly. The soft tracks on both of mine broke within a short period of adding the paint. AM tracks are a must.
F is for FIRE, That burns down the whole town!
U is for URANIUM... BOMBS!
N is for NO SURVIVORS...
- Plankton
LSM
I think for myself that would be Dragons King Tiger. Very low parts count and fits like a charm!
Eric
I recently was doodling around in armor and built the Tamiya Tiran 5.
I loved that kit and wish it were my son.
Everything went together perfectly, and there was a lot of detail. Machine guns all over the outside of the thing, really boss.
My first set of metal tracks too, and that was smooth as cognac.
Modeling is an excuse to buy books.
What i have done so far living in a travel trailer has got to be Eduards Mig-21pf,perfict fit.
I think the build that gave me the least trouble was a resin kit I did of the Fokker D.II last year. Resin kits require CA glues, and often give me lots of trouble. This one reminded me of the old adage "Dump glue and paint into the box, give it a good shake and the model falls out already finished."
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