SEARCH FINESCALE.COM

Enter keywords or a search phrase below:

Why is this?

4550 views
40 replies
1 rating 2 rating 3 rating 4 rating 5 rating
  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: ...Ask the other guy, he's got me zeroed-in...
Posted by gringe88 on Wednesday, September 29, 2004 5:56 PM
i try to schedule stuff, but then i realize that the day is only 24 hours long and its 12:00 at night....
====================================== -Matt
  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: SETX. USA
Posted by tho9900 on Tuesday, September 28, 2004 6:25 AM
good! I bet you are snowed under with work... good for the modelling budget, bad for the modelling...

I'm waiting to see that SBD finished.. cockpit is a dream from the photos I saw... anxious to see the whole thing... I am thinging of building the SBD-3 and getting an 8x10 reduced of my uncle who flew as tailgunner on one, and put it on display with the model...
---Tom--- O' brave new world, That has such people in it!
  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Lower Alabama
Posted by saltydog on Saturday, September 25, 2004 10:26 PM
i get like that too tom, i get in the cockpit mode and don't want to do anything else. with the recent weather events here, my modelling time has been cut to nill. tomorrow i'm not working, so maybe i can get a few hours in on some styrene between my napping and vegging!!LOL

i know what you mean by the F8F build. i had a couple of kits with raised detail that i wasn't too crazy about, but once they were painted and weathered, they turned out lookin pretty good. later.
Chris The Origins of Murphy's Law: "In the begginning there was nothing, and it exploded."!!! _________ chris
  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: SETX. USA
Posted by tho9900 on Saturday, September 25, 2004 10:36 AM
Ok Chris I know what my problem is..... it hit me this morning as I am eagerly working on that Aeres cockpit for my F4U....

I love doing the detailing, working night and day on the cockpit... putting the little PE pieces in one by one... but when I get done with that I lose interest.. oh yeah I LOVE to see the finished product, but lately I haven't had the willpower to get them there...

I have 3 models in the build right now... F4U-1A Corsair, about 50% done with the cockpit area...

OS2U - done with the cockpit area, glued together and just waiting to paint it...

Harrier AV-8B ... done with the cockpit and fuselage glued together just waiting on the tanks and external stores and such to be glued on so I can paint it.

I'm sitting here itching to build this Tamiya A6M2 right now... and I know why... I wanna get into that cockpit build and go to town...

(For those of you not from the South or living in a decent sized city, it means to 'get busy' or 'work hard' but also do anything with gusto... when I was a kid I lived in a rural community and once in awhile we got the opportunity to "go to town" .. you put on some nice clothes, hopped in the car for the hour or so drive there... you got to go out to eat at a nice restaraunt, go shopping, drive around in the nice rich neighborhoods and look at the houses etc... no, it wasn't as "Beverly Hillbillies" as it sounds but it was a special thing... So... "going to town" in general is something you do with the same enthusiasm as you had when you were "going to town"

I think I need to discipline myself and go ahead and finish these three than maybe get something with not as much detail that will be fun just to slap together and paint.... and have it come out looking pretty decent despite the lack of detail... I did a (cant remember who made it) F8F like that once and it was a REAL fun build and when you look at it hanging from the ceiling you wouldn't know theres no detail to it... it's nicely painted and weathered and is just a good of an eye catcher as my SBD-5 with it's gazillion cockpit pieces...
---Tom--- O' brave new world, That has such people in it!
  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Lower Alabama
Posted by saltydog on Monday, September 6, 2004 11:37 PM
LOL.......must have!! later.
Chris The Origins of Murphy's Law: "In the begginning there was nothing, and it exploded."!!! _________ chris
  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: SETX. USA
Posted by tho9900 on Monday, September 6, 2004 8:28 AM
maybe once we knew it was ok to be lazy in modelling it inspired us... lol
---Tom--- O' brave new world, That has such people in it!
  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Lower Alabama
Posted by saltydog on Sunday, September 5, 2004 9:37 AM
thats funny tho9900, me too!! when i posted here a couple of times, i actually got over there and knocked some things out!!LOL crazy.......later.
Chris The Origins of Murphy's Law: "In the begginning there was nothing, and it exploded."!!! _________ chris
  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: SETX. USA
Posted by tho9900 on Sunday, September 5, 2004 7:39 AM
I think I should be paying Salty for model-therapy.. after reading this yesterday it made me get up... actually walk the 4 or so feet to the old work bench....

And MODEL!

Decided to can the OS2U...
Got the HH-65 all nice and Futured up and ready to paint tomorrow.
Detailed the cockpit a little more on the A-1H, got some of the interior pieces ready to glue to the fuselage.

Problem is I am 5 hours away from winning a "good" model of the OS2U... I need to stay off Ebay... I know soon as I get it I am going to want to start it...
---Tom--- O' brave new world, That has such people in it!
  • Member since
    February 2004
  • From: Green Lantern Corps HQ on Oa
Posted by LemonJello on Saturday, September 4, 2004 9:04 PM
I have found my people! This is my problem right now. I've got a brand new desk, a stack of kits and even some unfinished business with a couple of projects, but I come here and post or shop for even more kits instead of building. I'm thinking that I'm going to just shelve the ones I've started and take one of my kits and start fresh. I hope that gets me going full steam again. I sure hope so.
A day in the Corps is like a day on the farm; every meal is a banquet, every paycheck a fortune, every formation a parade... The Marine Corps is a department of the Navy? Yeah...The Men's Department.
  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: SETX. USA
Posted by tho9900 on Saturday, September 4, 2004 1:01 PM
Well as I sit here I look to my right at the HH-65, I am about 1/2 complete on (just paint the main body and glue on the knick knacks), the OS2U I am half-heartedly building... with a A-1H Skyhawk in the box behind me with the cockpit interior done and that's it...

My problem is like all of yours. I don't have kids but wy wife has an active schedule so there is lot of the chores I pick up in the meantime. (cooking, washing etc...)

BUT.... on a day like today when she is outside with the dogs and I could be building, here I am on the forum... or thinking about going to the store etc... it's not that I dont want to build. I think it's like a few others said... I need to wind down first... luckily I have Monday off too... I guess that's when I will finish at least the HH-65...
---Tom--- O' brave new world, That has such people in it!
  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Lower Alabama
Posted by saltydog on Friday, September 3, 2004 10:34 PM
LOL reggie!! now thats a man with his priorities straight!!

wibhi2 i recently had a 2 week sabatical due to waiting on subcontractors to do there thing, now i did some heavy duty modelling during that period myself!! should have been doing some estimates on future projects, but i was "distracted". my wife finally pryed me from the bench and scolded me til a fly wouldn't land on me, then i snapped back from the realm of plaskit.LOL i've logged about 2 hrs at the bench since i started this thread, so i'm doin' OK. later.
Chris The Origins of Murphy's Law: "In the begginning there was nothing, and it exploded."!!! _________ chris
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, September 3, 2004 6:17 AM
i have the workbench, the homework table and the computer all within rolling distance in my room so its a huge tussle between reading a novel, building, internetting and chatting online, and doing homework. sometimes the modelling gets shoveled aside cos i know once i start, i cant stop! my fave time ot build is at 3 am in the morning. no distractions and unlimited time. sleep in class, who needs a bed ?
  • Member since
    March 2003
  • From: Brooklyn
Posted by wibhi2 on Thursday, September 2, 2004 11:25 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by tigerman

How many of you do this? You start one project only to be derailed by the new arrival of another and start to research the new kit and basically leave the old one to hang out to dry. Then repeat the process with yet another.


Bwahahaha.......Story of my model time. Tho, so far this year - Thanks to all of you here on the forum, I've finished 4. The dark side of this is that I have six current and 2 that have suffered the anti-aircraft hammer.

Saltydog: Your not the only one in this boatBig Smile [:D]. Have faith and keep pluggin' man - it'll get done sooner or later. I find that I'll putter/procrastinate months at a time (besides really working to 2 or 3 am), then I'll take 2 or 3 weeks - benefit of owning your own business - and do nothing but model - Those are my good days.
3d modelling is an option a true mental excercise in frusrtation
  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Lower Alabama
Posted by saltydog on Thursday, September 2, 2004 10:31 PM
Quincy, i too feel a pang of guilt if the sun is shinning outside and i'm inside fartin' around with some plaskik. i love a nice, slow, rainy day with the wife and kid off shoppin' someplace!!LOL later.
Chris The Origins of Murphy's Law: "In the begginning there was nothing, and it exploded."!!! _________ chris
  • Member since
    May 2003
  • From: Central USA
Posted by qmiester on Thursday, September 2, 2004 8:57 PM
To me, it's just the time of the season. I figured out years ago that I ain't going to get much modeling done in the late spring, summer or early fall. There's all those things to do outside when the weather is nice (camping, fishing, flying etc not to mention it turns into a bummer when you're in the basement working on a model and the wifey is outside mowing the lawn). Winter weather is an excellent reason to stay inside and do something like modeling with out feeling guilty.
Quincy
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, September 2, 2004 8:38 PM
I just got my kids to sleep 20 minutes ago and here i am on the computer instead of building,i better hurry up if i want to do something cause the little ones only sleep a couple of hours during the day.......
Maybe i'll give the A/B a good clean after last nights work,iknow i should clean it straight after use but i find myself running a rinse through it and sticking it on the bench to be cleaned next time i want to use it,guess i'm just a lazy bugger.......
  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Lower Alabama
Posted by saltydog on Thursday, September 2, 2004 12:45 PM
LOL Thad!!! i've done the same thing more than one time myself!! later.

Chris The Origins of Murphy's Law: "In the begginning there was nothing, and it exploded."!!! _________ chris
  • Member since
    May 2004
  • From: Dallas
Posted by KINGTHAD on Thursday, September 2, 2004 8:12 AM
Just last night I got both kids to sleep (2 year old and a 3 mth old) and sat down at the desk for the first time in a week!!!! What did I do I clean up the desk then I looked around at my builds and didnt no where to start and can you believe it, I went to bed....
Im at work this morning asking myself WHY??????

Thad
  • Member since
    January 2003
  • From: Washington State
Posted by leemitcheltree on Thursday, September 2, 2004 6:07 AM
Yeah, Chris,
I also suffer from the procrastination bug. There's work I should be doing right now, but instead, I'm sitting here on this computer........why?
I find both stimulating, but I prefer building.
One day I must actually finish a model...........actually I DID finish a model tonight - a 120mm Verlinden Waffen SS trooper - the new owner picks it up this saturday - and I get my money for the build.
And thanks to all those who wrote articles for FSM on painting figures with oils.

Cheers, LeeTree
Remember, Safety Fast!!!

  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Lower Alabama
Posted by saltydog on Wednesday, September 1, 2004 11:06 PM
LOL, this is funny!! you guys have made me feel better by your honest answers!! and with college football kicking off full blast Saturday, i'll really be challenged. i did get some work done tonight though, so i feel a little "revival" comin' on. once i get there, i can really turn some stuff out quickly, not that i'm in a hurry, but it just seems to go quickly for me.

tigerman i do that some too, but my thing is this, i like to get a kits cockpit and internal displays totally finished, then join the fuselage halves together. when this is done on one kit, i'll get that far with several more kits and box them all up. when this is done, i'll take one down and begin the construction, and then catch up the rest of the kits to this point. then go back and begin sanding and filling all of them, and usually one begins to pull out ahead of the others and i go ahead and finish that one. then, all of them seem to come off the bench in rapid succession!!LOL my favorite part of a build is painting/weathering. the rest is pretty cool, but i love to paint them and try different stuff with my airbrush. by getting a bunch of kits to the same point, i have several weeks of painting and fun scheduled in a row............now that is what i'm looking forward to!!
on the bench now, i have 1 "B" model stang from AM, (fuselage halves joined), 3 tamiya P-51Ds, 2 of them have True Details resin pits, the other is OOB with the exception of the TD resin seat (cockpits are ready to be installed and fuselage halves are about to be joined), an F4F wildcat with Aires resin and PE pit (got the pit painted and detailed, now i'm workin' on the PE seat harness), got the fuselage halves joined on a AM SBD-3 (about to start the engine detail), and finally, i have an F4U-5N with the TD resin pit painted and detailed with the fuselage halves joined and about to start on the engine detail. i'm trying to get them all to the "joined fuselage" stage. plus, i'm paintnig 4 resin ejection seats for an F/A-18E, and a F-15C. i'll just have 2 spare seats lying around for when i do another corresponding subject. anyway, i can't wait to get all the said subjects up to the painting stage, boy what some fun i'll be having then!!!LOL later.
Chris The Origins of Murphy's Law: "In the begginning there was nothing, and it exploded."!!! _________ chris
  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: Texas
Posted by wbill76 on Wednesday, September 1, 2004 10:48 PM
I have the opposite problem...I want to build every day but have to force myself to not do it unless I can be calm, relaxed, and able to focus on what I'm doing for at least an hour. I've not touched my current project since Sunday as a result but I've got Friday and Monday off for the holiday so I'm not too worried.

I avoid tigerman's situation with fiendish passion...A new project does not get started unless the previous one is completed. Of course, I'm set to break that rule in 10 days as I plan to alternate days working on a GB T34 and my Leopold simultaneously, but I won't have any side projects going on with those two monsters in the works.

I do sometimes fall victim to salty's disease in that my workbench is right across from my computer desk...so if I'm waiting for some parts to dry or just taking a brief break, I'll pop over to the computer and check the forums or poke around a bit, then go back to work. This is double-edged, very handy for checking photos/resources but also a distraction if not carefully controlled. Big Smile [:D]
  • Member since
    March 2004
  • From: Philadelphia
Posted by jblittle254 on Wednesday, September 1, 2004 10:07 PM
Man, I know all this too well . . . . I trudge through the work day, excited about all that I'm going to accomplish on my current project, then once I get home I can't drag myself to my work area. I either zone out in front of the TV, surf the net, start checking out the instructions for a new kit, etc. If I can get my butt to my bench, I can happily build for hours, but actually getting myself there is a challenge!

-Jonathan
  • Member since
    September 2011
Posted by fightnjoe on Wednesday, September 1, 2004 10:06 PM
i find myself with a strange feeling. i have a hobby desk now with a system on site. i have two rather intense builds going on. i worked hard on them until i could go no farther because of the lack of supplies. now i have the supplies and a three day weekend coming up. looks like 72 hour building marathon in my future.

joe

Veterans,

Thank You For Your Sacrifices,

Never To Be Forgotten

Where you can find me:

Workbench on FaceBook  Google Plus  YouTube

  • Member since
    March 2003
  • From: Rain USA, Vancouver WA
Posted by tigerman on Wednesday, September 1, 2004 8:58 PM
How many of you do this? You start one project only to be derailed by the new arrival of another and start to research the new kit and basically leave the old one to hang out to dry. Then repeat the process with yet another.

   http://i7.photobucket.com/albums/y269/wing_nut_5o/PANZERJAGERGB.jpg

 Eric 

  • Member since
    February 2003
  • From: Melbourne, Australia
Posted by darson on Wednesday, September 1, 2004 7:46 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by j.s.harrison

I know what your saying saltydog,i guess it happens to us all.......
after i get home from work the kids swarm on me and after they empty my fuel tank even further i just can't be stuffed doing anything but coming here and having a chat...
but on the other hand some days are different and i work on my models for hours on end.......
Bottom line i guess it all has to do with what sort of mood your in at the time,model when you feel like it and not when you plan to it seems to work for me, iv'e almost finished my 4th for the year with 3 more to go by the end of the year....
Cheers J.S............


Mate I know where you're coming from, by the time I get home from work I'm knackered and then once the kids are off to bed it's dinner and cleaning up the house time Sad [:(]

By the time I get some time to myself it can be a real effort to drag myself into the model room. But I usually find that once I'm there I work for ages and yes I do try and plan out what I'm going to for the night.

It also helps if I can spend a little time on the forum while I'm at work (like now) Big Smile [:D]Big Smile [:D]

Cheers
Darren
  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Lower Alabama
Posted by saltydog on Wednesday, September 1, 2004 3:04 PM
digger i'm not burned out though, i get excited about building, but end up not doin' it from frolicking too much.LOL

Eric LOL, my daughter ain't old enough to attend school, and my wife is a stay at home mom, so my family sleeps in to about 9am everymorning while i'm getting up at 5:30/6am everymorning, so they stay up til i'm ready to hit the hay. besides, my daughter won't go to sleep without me in the room, so if i do get to work after they go to bed, i have to go and lay down with my daughter til' she gets to sleep, by that time, i'm usually about half asleep!!LOL later.
Chris The Origins of Murphy's Law: "In the begginning there was nothing, and it exploded."!!! _________ chris
  • Member since
    February 2003
  • From: Green Bay, WI USA
Posted by echolmberg on Wednesday, September 1, 2004 1:01 PM
I remember when my brother-in-law would tell me how he watched some movie he just bought at 11 o'clock at night. I used to say "Paul! You've got to be crazy!" But then I finally had a kid and now I realize why he used to watch movies at 11:00 or later. I hadn't worked on a kit in a year once my baby was born. But then not too long ago I tried his technique of doing things long after everyone else had gone to bed. I tried working on a plane starting at 11:00 PM and you know what? It worked! I hadn't been able to work on a kit in a year but once I starting working on them at my kitchen table (even though I do have a hobby bench downstairs) at 11:00 pm I was able to get my F-80 finished in about a week and a half or two weeks. I would try to just put in about an hour a night but some nights everything was clicking. Things were going so great that I figured I just HAD to keep on going and I wouldn't get to bed until 1:30 AM on a weeknight. Sure I would pay for it the next morning after four and a half hours of sleep but just thinking about how much I got accomplished and how giddy with excitement I felt (yes I know I need a life), it was soooo well worth it!

Salty, take it from one who feels your pain. Spend your time with the family. Play with your daughter. But at the end of the night after the Sandman has paid your household a visit, spend 30-60 minutes (or more!) tweeking with this and that. You'll get more done than you'll realize AND you'll go to bed happy. I think doing this myself kept me from feeling a "need" to get something done (that when it's no longer fun) to something I "wanted" to get done (I felt like a kid having fun again). I would just do one little step each night. It was just enough to make progress without feeling a sense of burn-out.

I know your situation deffers slightly from mine but I think taking tiny nibbles here and there at the hobby was better than trying to sit down for hours on end drowning in it.

I hope this made some sort of sense.

Best wishes,

Eric

  • Member since
    December 2003
  • From: 37deg 40.13' N 95deg 29.10'W
Posted by scottrc on Wednesday, September 1, 2004 11:17 AM
Man, you really hit the nail on the head. I suffer from this same problem. I get home and it seems other commitments made by the family or current projects that I lost interest in saps my willpower to want to model.

Unless I make it to the bench, then I'm not going to model. And then I go to bed dissatisfied with myself for not accomplishing something that I really want to do. If I can just get to the bench, once I'm there, I'm fine and can model away and then go to bed with a satisfied feeling of accomplishment.

Scott

  • Member since
    February 2003
  • From: A Spartan in the Wolverine State
Posted by rjkplasticmod on Wednesday, September 1, 2004 11:16 AM
It happens now & then. I may build like a Demon for a Month & then kinda drift along for a while. It's a Hobby, so build when you're in the mood & take a break when you like. I'm in a bit of a drifting mode right now myself.

Regards, Rick
RICK At My Age, I've Seen It All, Done It All, But I Don't Remember It All...
JOIN OUR COMMUNITY!

Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.

SEARCH FORUMS
FREE NEWSLETTER
By signing up you may also receive reader surveys and occasional special offers. We do not sell, rent or trade our email lists. View our Privacy Policy.