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Why?

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  • Member since
    February 2003
  • From: Where the coyote howl, NH
Posted by djrost_2000 on Saturday, August 30, 2003 6:52 PM
When I was a kid I built model planes as toys to be played with. Always been an aviation enthusiast. Time progressed and I built models for display. And when I see a well built aircraft model, it almost gets my adrenaline going as much as the real thing.

DJ
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, August 30, 2003 1:30 PM
Why ?

Because history of World War II is one of my greatest hobbies besides scale-modeling.
I build & paints the models, then when they are finished and on the shelfs in 3 dimensions i can imagine how it must have been at that time when a plane was driven by a propeller and not a turbine like today, when planes were rolling on their taxiway with the tail-landinggear down to the runway and speeded up until they reached takeoff-speed with the tail-landinggear up finally climbing into the clouds on their mission (Sorry - I'm in love with the old planes - not the modern ones Wink [;)]).

I prefer the bombers and attack-planes over the fighters. They have a more "massive" look with their 2 or more prop-engines than the small fighters. Evil [}:)]

Greetings
Mitchell
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, August 30, 2003 11:53 AM
I remember, when I was a wee little one, my dad building models which he then hung on my ceiling. I can still see him sitting at the kitchen table, building a 1/48 B17.

Then came those teen years for me, when it was cars, friends and girls.....modeling took a backseat.

Well, my father has long since passed and I have a little one of my own now (Daddies Girl Big Smile [:D] ) I passed a hobby shop and took a walk inside. It brought back some great memories of my first kits. At the time they were glued together in such a way to survive a nuclear blast (I even think they could have outlasted the pyramids) I bought one and have been going strong ever since.

My main subject is armor but, I have some fighter kits that I also enjoy doing.

So, my main reason: The good 'ole days Shy [8)]
  • Member since
    April 2014
Posted by r13b20 on Saturday, August 30, 2003 11:34 AM
Why?- I build helicopters for a living. I am a veteran. I am the son of a veteran. It's better than drinking and drugs. And the number one reason, (just for me), I don't have a wife or girlfriend! :(
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, August 29, 2003 3:59 PM
For me, its the allure of the exotic shape that I can hold in my hand and call my own.
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, August 29, 2003 3:03 PM
Well fighters. I always wanted to be a fighter pilot. Planes are wonderfull machines but a fighter is... 'the elite of all elites'. I´ve heard all those histories about great Aces and heros (USAF, RAF, LUFTWAFFE) and somethimes I feel that those guys are not real. Maybe they are from another planet. Air combat, the real 'dogfight' is amazing. And remeber the earlier days when fly fighter was Kngits and Gentelmans bussines.
Maybe that is my reason.
  • Member since
    February 2003
  • From: Panama City, Florida, Hurricane Alley
Posted by berny13 on Thursday, August 28, 2003 10:17 PM
My uncle flew P-40's and P-38's in the Pacific in WW ll, as well as P-51's in Europe. After the war he flew P-47's and P-80's. During the Korean war he flew the F-51's and F-86's. After the war he flew F-86's, F-89's and F-100's. He got me interested in model building and after I joined the USAF I continued to build.

Just to listen to some of the stories he would tell was fascinating. It wasn't about combat, but about flying. In my later years as an aircraft mechanic, I was able to get my hands on the wonderful flying machines. I loved being a mechanic and the best part of my military time was as a crew chief. In later years as I got more rank, I had to spend less time working on the aircraft and more time supervising. It finally reached a point where I very seldom got my hands dirty on them. You might say it is my way of getting my hands back on the aircraft, to be able to build them.

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
    March 2003
  • From: USA
Posted by cnstrwkr on Thursday, August 28, 2003 7:50 PM
I was inundated with WWII movies when I was a kid so did I have a choice but to have some exposure to aircraft. There was a hobby store within walking distance of my house when I was young. I would go and stare at the planes hanging in the window and one day the owner came out and gave me a kit. I was hooked on and off since then and the few times I left modeling it was for other hobbies that were hands on: playing an instrument(2 insturments) or building a drag race car(3 cars).
Tommy difficult things take time...the impossible, a little longer!
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, August 28, 2003 6:54 PM
Why?

To remember and never forget.

When I was a kid, the sold me the idea about the heroic of war and the good and bad guys, I was ten years old when I put together my first kit.

Now, I can tell you that there is no heroes or romance in war, in killing a human being. War is about politicians and ignorance and while other is dying politician are safe and comfortable in home. So please be open to other cultures and ideas, do not criticize wht you don't know or understand and never fortget.
  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: USA
Posted by 72cuda on Thursday, August 28, 2003 6:34 PM
Why?;
Well first off my dad is to blame he got me hooked on airplanes (he was in the USAF) and he was hooked too, so he got me so hooked that I took it futher and followed in his footsteps and went beyond that ( I've served 19 years in the AF & AF Reserves so far) and I love duplicate the equipment I worked and even to older stuff too, I got it so bad I'm trying to get all the military aircraft from 1930 to present in my collection, in my history I've worked about everything that transportation has to offer except ships & trains, I've worked Civil A/C, Military A/C, Cars, Heavy Equipment, Semi's, Missiles, Satellites, but I get the most thrill from working on models, and my restoration project of a 72 Cuda,
to think of it Wildwill & Claymore sums it all up and this hobby is addicting too, I've passed it onto my nephew and he's now hooked

84 of 795 1/72 Aircraft Competed for Lackland's Airman Heritage Museum

Was a Hawg Jet Fixer, now I'm a FRED Fixer   

 'Cuda

  • Member since
    March 2003
  • From: Brooklyn
Posted by wibhi2 on Tuesday, August 26, 2003 9:37 PM
Why? because it's fun and gosh darn it, I like it.

I've always enjoyed military avaiation - specifically jets and helicopters from the Vietnam era. This has since grown into a desire to create my own history of flight - american types and eras.

I also enjoy military history.
3d modelling is an option a true mental excercise in frusrtation
  • Member since
    August 2003
  • From: USA
Posted by mtollens on Tuesday, August 26, 2003 9:23 PM
I was hooked when I found out that the models' decals were ACTUAL squadrons!I was stationed at Marine Corps Air Station in Yuma, AZ and built a Monogram A-4E with VMAT-102 markings. I made mine low-viz including painting a "chicken" on the nose with the number on it to represent the actual paint job of the aircraft I worked on. Aviation has since become a hobby and building planes has become a past time. It's also a creative outlet, one of a few; I don't draw like I used to or play my guitar as much but I can always glue, sand or paint!
Max Tollens "plastic surgeon"
  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Kent, England
Posted by nmayhew on Tuesday, August 26, 2003 6:27 AM
my interest started with the battle of britain (i grew up in s.e. england over which it was fought), so i guess it's just grown from there...
nick
london
Kind regards, Nicholas
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, August 26, 2003 5:24 AM
For my entire adult life the only thing I've done is maintain and repair aircraft. Most likely because of my love of aircraft that started early on with plastic models. I guess it's one of those chicken or the egg situations. I do know that aviation has been a constant in my life for as long as I can remember. So naturally I build what I know and love.

Darren
  • Member since
    February 2003
  • From: Iowa- USA
Posted by toadwbg on Monday, August 25, 2003 10:42 PM
Fighter Planes: Their fast, sexy, and have big guns :) Sort of like a the subconsious female fantasy many of us have ;-)

OK come back to Earth: I am both an artist and an engineer. I feel that fighter planes are the end result of the expertise and excelence in each of those fields. My hobbies and professions feul and inspire each other in this way.
"I love modeling- it keeps me in the cool, dark, and damp basement where I belong" Current Projects: 1/48th Hasegawa F-14D- 25% 1/48th Tamiya Spitfire- 25%
  • Member since
    January 2003
  • From: NE Georgia
Posted by Keyworth on Monday, August 25, 2003 9:43 PM
My family also has a long and colorful military tradition. My dad was a navigator on B-24's and an Intel officer with the 20th AF with LeMay. I had a late uncle who was a flight test engineer for Glenn L. Martin-Nebraksa and he crewed on B-26 Marauders and B-29's. I watched all types of a/c fly overhead in Virginia, Germany, Okinawa, Fort Bragg: wherever my dad was assigned. Got to see them up close and personal when my turn came. I build what I know, and I build what my family members flew for a living. It makes me feel just a bit closer to them and reminds me of what a good many of us gave.
"There's no problem that can't be solved with a suitable application of high explosives"
  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Canada
Posted by gar26 on Monday, August 25, 2003 1:19 PM
My family is steeped in military tradition when it came time all the men in my family have served or are serving in the military. So it was logical that from a young age I had a fascination with military weapons. I enjoy the modern fighters but for some reason there is nothing better then the warbirds of WW2. The men that flew these machines were brave pilots and they seemed to have a comraderie that was second to none. So as long as they keep producing kits of the old warbirds I will keep building them.
gpebernat
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Monday, August 25, 2003 12:28 PM
My Dad was in Naval aviation maintenance. When I was a kid we spent several years living on N.A.S. Dallas.
Looking out my bedroom windows on one side I could see across the runway to the LTV plant and see brand new A7 Corsairs being rolled out into the hot Texas sunlight.
Out the other side I could see rows of KC-97 tankers of the Texas Air National Guard and beyond that the flightline of two Navy F-8 squadrons.
This was during the height of the Vietnam war and there were all sorts of fabulous aircraft coming and going all the time.
Needless to say it was a great place for a kid who was already a "plane nut" to live.
I'll never be able to look up and watch a flight of returning Crusaders roar into the break for landing again. Not from my own front yard or from anywhere else for that matter.
But somehow modelling helps to keep those unforgettable days alive for me.
Those were "The Wonder Years" for this kid.


  • Member since
    February 2003
  • From: Medina, Ohio
Posted by wayne baker on Monday, August 25, 2003 11:11 AM
I've always had a fascination with guns and airplanes. Combine the two and you get fighters. Since I'm not a great artist, I like to try to duplicate the paint schemes someone else has already developed. Then there are the days I believe in reincarnation.

 I may get so drunk, I have to crawl home. But dammit, I'll crawl like a Marine.

  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Monday, August 25, 2003 10:32 AM
I believe people are born with a natural inclaination for a certain thing, some are lucky enough to be able to expand on this. It could be mechanics, mathmatics, chemistry, music or even just curiosity . Most of us modelers have a combination of natural talents that pushes us in this direction (I am good with my hands and have a curiosity for history). I could learn to play the guitar, but I could never play at Joe Satriani's level, I could be an aeronautical engineer but it's not likely I would have the vision of Kelly Johnson. So I listen to Joe and build replicas of Kelly's work. Hopefully, when a model is finished, I have made a replica that is worthy of the brave men of all nations the flew, drove, sailed or otherwise operated the real thing.
  • Member since
    December 2009
  • From: West Grove, PA
Posted by wildwilliam on Monday, August 25, 2003 10:27 AM
personally, i am fascinated by the machines and the men who flew them. i enjoy trying to (re)create miniature 3 dimensional representations of some of the machines that served the forces in the most important conflict in recent history.
(i am a WWII prop-nut. and of course the ME-262).

2) it is fun to run through my apartment making 'airplane noises' when they are done. Big Smile [:D]

3) it gives me an excuse to buy tools and use them? Smile [:)]

4) we are all a little 'off' ? luckily we are mostly harmless.

ed.
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Monday, August 25, 2003 9:25 AM
I think the main reason I model Warplanes and armor is due to my military background. I am familiar with alot of the planes, so it just seemed natural to do so. For many, I think it's the fascination with something that is beyond reach. I know that I'll probably never get t ofly a Tomcat, or a Corsair, or any of the popular planes out there today. It just gets me a little closer to something I love.

demono69
  • Member since
    May 2003
  • From: USA
Why?
Posted by nsclcctl on Monday, August 25, 2003 8:07 AM
Sitting, not looking at the sky, as I often do and ponder where we are in the scheme of things. I am sitting at my desk thinking as I do all day long, about my current project. Another 1:48 german fighter. The question is, Why? Why do we do this? I know I love learning about the planes, the history. I also love the final product, especially the cool paint schemes. I love getting better and better at it. But why are we so fascinated with fighter planes? I never flew one and know I could not have done what those guys did. Maybe in an earlier life. I have often thought about that. Just curious what drives everybody.
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