bbrowniii
Wabashwheels:
To call application of photoetch parts "lazy" is an ignorance of photoetch. I just built a throttle quadrant in 3D from a flat piece of metal. After all the bending, fitting and placing those tiny handles, I take offense to someone calling that lazy.
I agree with your entire post, but particularly with this statement. Different materials require different skills.
I don't think I said anything about the application of photo-etch (If I did or it was construed to mean that, I apologize... As I said earlier and on many other occasions, I use it myself (provided it comes with the kit) It's the reliance on it that's at the heart of the matter at hand...
Many modelers, especially those younger ones who've come up with "nothing but the best" on their benches and who have never known the times when Monogram kits were the cream of the crop and "state of the art", When the cost of the kit is already too high, having to buy extra parts which are even more expensive in order to compete can get really old, really fast...
I read it all the time in the various forum hooches... Someone will ask about a certain kit and if it's any good, or "who makes the best" whatever, and the replies, rather than musings and tips about a kit's pluses or minuses, will invariably go into which sets of P/E to buy, and which resin cockpits you need, and the best decal sheets to be had in order to pimp it out to "the point of No Return"...
It kind of overwelms me, and I can't tell what anyone is talking about by that time anyway, so nobody really learns anything, except that this kit is the most labor-free one, and this one will need everything there is to had in order to make even close to an approximation of an artist's concept-drawing (An accute case of AMS that became fatal, due to complications arising from "Gastonitis"...)
Anyway, that's the place I'm in right now... No one should be writing to folks that're asking about the "best" anything, because you're probably talking Greek to them anyway at this point. Just tell them about the kits that you think they'd be happiest with, why that is so, and leave out the AM detail-talk, since they're likely beginners, and using P/E parts, along with everything else, is beyond the scope of their inquiry, and it's an advanced technique anyway...
Beginners will just be throwing their money away... "Well, dear... They said that that kit's no good, unless I buy this cockpit set and that wheel-bay set, a vac-form canopy set and masks, and five tubes of putty... So I dropped 200.00 on the extra stuff, worked for a couple hours on it, then tossed the whole thing becasue nothing fit rght.. But I got this neat little Snap-Tite kit that's pretty good."
Makes for a pretty good "bench-fire" (the modeling equivilant of a fighter-pilot having what they call a "Helmet Fire", due to too much information coming into the brain-housing group and resulting in sensory overload and controlled flight into terrain)...
Anyway, when it gets to the point that that one shelves a set of skills and begins relying mostly or even totally on another (jury's still out on PE being a "skill-set" in and of it's own, with me since, unless you actually do the photo-etching yourself, it really is just adding more parts to a kit) set, that while perhaps "Lazy" is too strong a word, "short-cutting" isn't... It could also be construed as "cheating" in some instances...
One instance when that would be the case is actually trying to pass off "store-bought" PE parts as "self-made" PE parts in a kit entered into the "Scratch-buildt" category... And I've seen THAT one happen with a modeler (who shall remain nameless here, since he knows who he is, and he knows that I know too, and he's in here fairly frequently)... I spotted a part that looked exactly like one of the PE parts I used in another build-category (right down to the part-number stamped on it, lol)...
Scratch-built details and super-details have a certain... look about them... I dunno... Guess my main beef is that the kits themselves have gotten more and more complicated, expensive, and contain SO much AM stuff that the "individuality" is gone...
At the same time, it forces a change in techniques upon me that I don't care to make, and incurr expenses I didn't plan, don't need, and can ill-afford, but am forced to because I still want and like to compete, and those modelers that are really of only average or slightly above-average skills are nipping at the heels of those who've always been putting in the time and effort (just not the cash) to make the parts...
I don't like getting into a contest with a guy that's got so much money invested in a kit that he's put his cats to sleep in order to not risk losing the model to a "Kitty Halucination" ( I only had time invested in that B-17 diorama, for instance... Wasn't so much as an after-market seat harness-buckle in it, all the detail parts were from around the house or another kit. )...
At any rate, I get exactly what the writer was saying, and agree with him, overall... Perhaps one day they will add a category called, "Modified OOB and Kitbash, No After-market Allowed"... I think that'd be my category to enter, lol...