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AMP 1/48 OH-6A Loach

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  • Member since
    January 2010
Posted by Stazie190 on Monday, April 3, 2023 11:30 PM

Hi O,

I'm looking to upgrade my Canon 7D to maybe a mirorless R5, or a Sony A7a and also looking at lens. I want to put another vented booth in my workshop for a 3D scanner, printer and wash stations and maybe build also a multi use little photo studio, but my model workshop is getting crowded the way it is now.

I still have to get off my ass and start posting pictures but to lazy to get another subscription to a photo sharing server to post any on Finescale here.

Building the single engine US Army AH-1 Cobra series in 1/48 is not too complex and have been using 3 basic kits and parts from several other kits to kit bash up, or down. Special Hobby/ICM kits covers the G and S(Mod), the Fuijimi Q-8 kit can cover the S(Mod) with a lot of work, but mainly covers the P, E and F model. The Revell kit is mainly only good for the F model and use a lot of its parts for other models. I have a lot of spare kits, to many to tell you about, otherwise I might have to admit I have a problem collecting kits especially the AH-1 Cobra.

I've been working on a kit to Cobra conversion chart that might be handy for you. I may have mentioned this before, I used to crew Cobras and Hueys and have tons of referernce materials I use. A lot of the AH-1 manuals are availble for free on line at liberatedmanuals.com as well.

Just pick a 1/48 scale Cobra series you want to build and I can point you in the right direction. Depends on how much, or little you want to scratch build, or use after market parts too.

Thanks,

 

Tom

  • Member since
    February 2003
  • From: Between LA and OC, SoCal
Posted by oortiz10 on Monday, April 3, 2023 6:41 PM

Hey Tom, thanks for stopping by and sharing your comments and compliments. As far as my photo set-up goes, I use my old Sony Alpha-100 with its stock 18-70mm lens on a tripod and a remote to eliminate "shake" at slower shutter speeds.  I usually choose the f-stop (aperture), depending on how "deep" I want my focus to be, and let the camera figure out the shutter speed. I can do one or the other, but I'm not a good enough photog to be able to control both. (I'm still learning.) 

Anyway, again, thanks for stopping by. I'm looking forward to your Cobra, and you offer of helping me sort out the Army variants has me thinking about my next "batch" build.

Cheers!

-O

-It's Omar, but they call me "O".

  • Member since
    January 2010
Posted by Stazie190 on Sunday, April 2, 2023 2:02 AM

Hi O,

You took great pictures as well, very proffesional looking. What kind of camera/lens and settings did you use?

Also, I just finished making ECS hoses on a 1/48 AH-1P I'm working on and used your tip of wraping smaller diameter wire around larger diameter wire and turned out fantastic.

Lead wire works great to that you can squeeze the end with a flat nose pliers to shape the attachment duct to the seat. I'm paint testing it now to get the off white wraping around the hose, but still looks great painted black. Next come scratch building the helmet sight system rails and wires. 

Thanks for the tip again.

 

Tom 

  • Member since
    February 2003
  • From: Between LA and OC, SoCal
Posted by oortiz10 on Wednesday, March 29, 2023 9:56 AM

Hey gang, thanks for the pats on the back. Very much appreciated!

stik, I'm with you on the OD Loaches. I originally wanted to build this as a Vietnam era bird. Tom, I'm not saying this kit is unbuildable, it's just...challenging. Heck, I was able to finish it, so that's saying something. I just didn't enjoy it. I picked it up thinking it was a decent replacement for the "difficult to find" Tamiya boxing. Johh, the markings turned out better than I had expected, although there's a mistake on the orange "sash." I just figured I'd leave it because trying to correct it would probably cause more problems that I would fix.

Still, I'm glad you gents liked her. Thanks again for the feedback. Good luck with your builds. (Johh, if you're ever looking to off-load some of those Loaches, let me know. *wink wink*)

Happy modeling!

-O

-It's Omar, but they call me "O".

  • Member since
    April 2003
  • From: USA
Posted by keavdog on Wednesday, March 29, 2023 9:14 AM

Turned out great O!  Really like the markings.  I did the Tamiya kit way back and remeber it being a pretty easy build.  According to scalemates the AMP kit was a new tool in 2009.  I've got a few MD500s/OH-6s in the stash - really like the little dudes.  Great work.

Thanks,

John

  • Member since
    January 2010
Posted by Stazie190 on Wednesday, March 29, 2023 12:49 AM

Hi O,

Looks like you did an excellent job on it. I want to build that same AMP kit to go with the Special Hobby/ICM AH-1G kits for a Pink team, (hunter killer team) in Vietnam. The only other OH-6A available I could find is an old Tamiya kit which is hard to find and usual goes for $80-100 if you can find one.

My AMP kit still sits on the shelf though but I'm glad to see you did a fantastic job on it and thanks for the heads up with your build issues. AMP's kits are not really nice and worse than an old Revell kit in my opinion which surprises me that products out of Ukraine are fairly decent like ICM's 1/48 AH-1G, except it's the same mold as Special Hobby's AH-1G which are fantastic kits, except decals from Eastern Europe are terrible. Too pappery and very difficult to lay down no mater what solution you use.

I picked my AMP kit #401 up I think in 2020 and the packageing material inside the box was a Ukrainian newspaper which I thought was sort of funny, but can't read crylic.

Anyways, great job and thanks for the build tips.

 

Tom

  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: Sonora Desert
Posted by stikpusher on Tuesday, March 28, 2023 9:27 PM

Excellent work O. Of course I prefer the Loach in Vietnam era OD, but yours looks really sharp in these colors.

 

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: Between LA and OC, SoCal
AMP 1/48 OH-6A Loach
Posted by oortiz10 on Tuesday, March 28, 2023 8:51 PM

Hey whirlybirders, I finally got the second Loach of the year's first "double." This is AMP's boxing of a Vietnam era Loach. The boxing included extra parts, PE and decals to model Miss Clawd IV. I was able to pick up this kit cheap at a swap meet, and I was initially excited about building it up. This kit was originally started during the pandemic, but it quickly got relegated to the Shelf of Doom. This kit was a P.I.G. 

While concurrently building a Minicraft OH-6 variant, it became clear to me that AMP's boxing was a copy of someone else's plastic. This kit was not fun to build. The plastic was greasy and textured with bits and blobs on the surface. The detail was soft and mushy. There were no clear locating or attachment points. To make matters worse, the parts' fit was terrible. The windscreen's contours didn't fit the shape of the fuselage, and it was also textured, foggy and thick. So thick that, when it came time to attach it, it made contact with some of the interior details. (Although, that might have been an assembly error on my part that I'll attribute to the terrible fit of the preceding assemblies.) Actually, none of the transparencies fit well. Nor did the doors. The PE didn't fit either, and I ended up only using a few pieces here and there. The instructions were vague, at best. The parts were numbered in the instructions but not on the spure. Worse, there were missing and misshapen parts. After deciding that I didn't want to fuss with mingun assembly, the build changed tack, and I moved away from MCIV as my subject. After settling on markings, I learned that paint wouldn't stick to the plastic. I tried acrylics, enamels and lacquers, with and without primer. I even sanded the plastic to give it some "bite." Regardless of what I did, the paint would flake, chip and lift. 

Still, I persisted...

So, here's what I ended up with. I'm not totally happy with the results, but I am happy to be done and have it off my bench. I think it's a solid three-footer that will look OK on the highest tippy-top shelf. 

It's painted with a mix of AK Real Colors, Tamiya acrylics, Testors and MM enamels...whatever would stick! The orange "sash" is painted on, all the rest of the markings are from the spares box. Weathering was kept to a minimum since the real TH-6s were kept pretty clean. 

Alright, enough of my whining...let's look at some photos...

 

And here's one of both my H-6s together...

As usual, comments, questions and criticisms are welcome. I appreciate your feedback.

Thanks for lookin'!

-O

-It's Omar, but they call me "O".

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