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STUPIDEST MODELING THING YOU EVER DONE

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  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Huntington, WV
Posted by Kugai on Sunday, February 22, 2004 4:15 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by sisco

Took the cap off a tube of glue and it spurted out onto my index finger.
Don't know what I was thinking when I licked it off my finger.
This was the small tube that came with an Ertl diecast , tasted like oranges but the tip of my tounge was numb for a couple of hours.


What's worse is doing that with CA glue.

Not something one is likely to forget or repeat. Dunce [D)]

http://i712.photobucket.com/albums/ww122/randysmodels/No%20After%20Market%20Build%20Group/Group%20Badge/GBbadge2.jpghttp://i6.photobucket.com/albums/y211/razordws/GB%20Badges/WMIIIGBsmall.jpg

  • Member since
    February 2003
  • From: Indiana, USA
Posted by cassibill on Monday, February 23, 2004 3:40 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by B. LeCren

Courtney:
Since you found your crossbow, remind me to sneak up on you quietly!
Bruce



You can try. I'm use to dealing with cats and it doesn't get much sneakier. (in the darkness on my bedroom at 2 in the morning...) Evie!! Get off the bookshelf; I know you're there.
PS Crossbow(or compound bow for distance if i'm willing to use to hands); Machete or club for close quarters, probably the machete cause if I have to case something I may need to cut brush.
We have too many of the bad varmits for me to go out unarmed. Ask the mink in the chicken house, he bolted and so did I but mine was the steel kind with 80 lbs of pull behind it.

cdw My life flashes before my eyes and it mostly my life flashing before my eyes!!!Big Smile The 1/144 scale census and message board: http://144scalelist.freewebpage.org/index.html

  • Member since
    January 2003
Posted by Jeff Herne on Monday, February 23, 2004 9:15 PM
There are two...and one happened to me...the other...to one of my students...this is a long post (you've been warned).

It’s about 11:30 at night, and yours truly is working on a model…a Ferrari 642 Formula One car to be precise. The instructions call for gluing 2 side plates to the front of the chassis, which I did, only to realize I had them backwards, the right on the left, and the left on the right side of the car. So, with some grumbling and swearing under my breath, I started the daunting task of removing 2 pieces of flat, CA laminated plastic from the model without causing major damage. I started with the X-acto, wedged between the two parts, and slowly started rocking the knife back and forth. About halfway through, I realized that my progress was being impeded by the dull blade in the knife…so, it’s time for a fresh new (and very sharp) No.11 blade…and back to the task at hand.


Picture if you will, a person whittling on a stick…holding the stick in the left hand while holding the knife in the right. This was the method I was using on this race car…well, I immediately applied the same amount of pressure I had been using with the old blade…and ZING! The blade went right through and the part fell to the floor. I felt a bit of a sting, and as I put the model down, determined I had nicked the fingertip of my left ring finger. I went over to the kitchen sink, turned on the water, and stuck my finger under the faucet, at which time a little less than ½ inch of my finger plops off and drops into the bottom of the sink. This is also when it really started to hurt…and bleed. Hmm…this could be a cause for concern…I grab a towel, and my fingertip, and stick it back on the end of my finger…then wrap it.


I tell my wife she needs to drive me to the hospital…because I ‘uhm…kinda cut myself’. She drives me to the ER, where I’m given a quick examination and told to sit in the waiting room. Looking around, I’m number five in line, right behind the old drunk guy who fell off his barstool and cut his forehead on his gravity induced journey to the floor. It wasn’t the fall, it was the sudden stop at the end that did it.


My finger is throbbing, babies are crying, and this old drunk guy sprawled out on the chair next to be passing gas and moaning, I start think…did I clean my paint brushes before I left? Finally, the orderlies come and take the drunken Capt. Gravity to the ER, where he proceeds to throw up, making the overall situation even more wretched. I’m next…finally, it’s now 3am, my wife is asleep in the chair next to me. Just a few more minutes…when the emergency room doors open up, and two guys walk in, well, actually, one guy walked in, the other was in a wheelchair. It seems that Bob and Mike decided at 3am to dive off the 2nd floor balcony into the swimming pool at the local fleabag motel…Bob made it, Mike didn’t, hitting his leg on the side of the cement pool just below the knee, the bone popping through the skin like a steak knife through a Ziploc baggie. Bob is quite upset, but Mike is too drunk, and in too much shock, to care…in fact, he’s singing ‘Walk like an Egyptian’ and hiccupping.


Well, I just got bumped down the priority list, because Aqua-Lung decided to do a face plant into the pavement. It’s approaching 4am now, and I’m vying for the next spot with a woman who’s complaining of ‘cramps’. Listen lady, I cut my finger off…take a pill and wait your turn, ok?


I finally get into the ER and I’m met by a little doctor (about 4’2”) who says (no kidding), “My name is Dr. Agastya Bohatu-Kohli, but you can call me Doctor Tom" Uhh...did I miss something here? Someone slip something into my fruit juice? Ok Doctor Tom, my name is Jeff, but you can call me 'Lord Zyborg, Ruler of the Universe.’


So Doctor Tom takes one look at my finger and says (no kidding), "Oh my goodness. You have cut your finger off”. Thank you Archimedes, here’s your Nobel Prize, can I go home now? Of course he opens up the bandage, and promptly grabs hold of the tip of my finger and pulls. ‘Here, pull my finger’ (remember the old joke?) I fart. And scream. Blood squirts all over like a bad scene from MASH. He’s holding my fingertip like it’s a piece of popcorn, looking at it, then turns and throws it away. ‘Excuse me, that was my finger. I’d make a fist and punch you in the face but it hurts too much.’


I’m informed that there’s not enough there to warrant sewing it back on, and besides, it’s been too long anyway, I should have come to the ER sooner and they would have been able to re-attach it… I’m given a shot of something in the tip of my finger, which goes numb…ahhh…relief. Why couldn’t you do this 4 hours ago???? Fifteen minutes later, my fingertip, or rather, what’s left of it, is cleaned up with stitches. I’m informed the tissue will grow back with minimal scarring.


The sun is now coming up, and I’m tired. When I get home…I start to investigate the accident scene from the night before. I’d better clean up the sink, since there’s blood everywhere. As I look down into the sink, I notice a little bead about the size of a BB laying on the bottom…I pick it up, and realize it’s not a bead, it’s the bone from my fingertip…round on one side, nice clean cut on the other…I still have it in my modeling toolbox…ironically, in an old X-acto blade tube.


Hindsight should have told me to just not worry about it, bandage it up and move on…which is basically what I do know when X-acto related accidents happen…so far, there’s been 3 serious cuts, 2 thigh punctures, and 3 foot punctures from X-actos rolling off the table and plummeting towards some part of my body.


Then there’s the Dremel mishap…Did you know that a run-away Dremel tool with a carbide burr bit can really tear up human flesh?


Not all war wounds are related to mishaps with tools and not all have happened to me…(this is a true story)


I used to teach a 4-H group about plastic modeling. The kids ranged from 10 to 15, and met every Saturday from 9am to noon. About 7am on Saturday morning, my phone rings, and there’s a very distressed parent of one of my modeling kids on the other end. “Billy” (his name has been changed) has super-glued himself. My first concern are for the eyes. “Did he get any glue in his eyes?” No, thank goodness…he’s glued his fingers…”not a problem, here’s what you do…go and get some finger nail polish remover, or acetone, and really soak the area. Then start trying to move the fingers apart with a twisting action, don’t pull because you could tear the skin”


I’m asked to wait on the line while he does this procedure to his son…a minute or two later I hear a blood-curdling scream… I’m yelling into the phone to try and find out what the problem is…unless the skin is broken, finger nail polish remover or acetone shouldn’t cause extreme pain like that.


His father finally comes back on the line…and informs me that it worked…”What exactly happened? Why did he scream like that??” Then the truth comes out…

“Well, ‘Billy’ got up early to finish some parts before the meeting. He was working on the model when he got superglue on his fingers…not realizing he had glue on his fingers, he does what most males do in the morning…he scratched himself…and promptly stuck his fingers to his…uhh…you get the idea…


Too embarrassed to give all the details, Billy’s father insured me he hadn’t glued anything to his eyes, but rather to his fingers. Of course he neglected to tell me what had been glued to his fingers. And to add insult to injury…Dad poured acetone on his son’s privates. Now there’s a father-son moment you’d rather soon forget….to this day, I shudder when I recall that phone call.

  • Member since
    September 2011
Posted by fightnjoe on Monday, February 23, 2004 10:11 PM
lets see where do i start. although i have not cut myself "yet", spent three hours painting p-40b last week noticed wrong color, spent three more hours painting again wrong color. six hours wasted when five min. online and found a site which gives proper color and which co. makes it. or how about spending about 20 hours working on a6m5 painted, some scratchbuilding, much time with eyes crossed. kids were fighting so i get up and proceed to destroy said a6m5 in about one sec. dropped on the floor and stepped on.

there are more but due to embarrasing nature will not share at this time.

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: Brooklyn
Posted by wibhi2 on Tuesday, February 24, 2004 9:46 AM
I was explaining to some neophytes how to build a metal stud wall using zippy's (3/4" self tapping sheet metal screws) to secure the studs to the tracks. I had just finished exhorting in excrutiating detail about how to be careful on where you place your thumb on the back side of the track/stud when driving the zippy, when I screwed my thumb to the track and stud.Black Eye [B)]

I've cut my right index finger from knukle to nail with an exacto while trying to cut a piece of fiberglass for a 1/12 phantom I was working on.

While trying to take a warp out of a fuselage 1/2 with hot water, I shrank the 1/2 by
12 scale inches - but hey,, no more warp.Big Smile [:D]
3d modelling is an option a true mental excercise in frusrtation
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, February 24, 2004 5:14 PM
Hey, we've all done some dumb things. Trouble is you know sooner or later you're bound to do something as dumb, or even worse! One that comes to mind is Tamiya's tank transporter I was working on a while back. Since I alternate between aircraft, military and autos, dependin on my mood, I had it half done and lost interest for a month or two while I worked on other stuff. Whwn I got around to working on it again, many pieces were missing !! Some how several sprues of parts got thrown out during one of my "I'll never use these" clean-ups! Cost $32.00 to get the parts replaced by Tamiya. Luckily, it turned out nice, but boy was it expensive !!
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, February 24, 2004 6:38 PM
Not modeling, but power tool related.

I use to set countertops, we made a delivery one day, but it rained on us on the way there.
Now countertops are made from particle board which swells if it gets wet, so we had covered the load with a tarp, even tho a couple spots got damp enough to swell up some.
No problem tho, I hook up the 4" Craftsman belt sander and procced to sand down the swollen areas.
I have the top on the tailgate of the truck and Im sanding it down by holding the sander vertically in front of me and steadying it as I sand along when the sander hits a buried nail and jerks upward, hits the 2x4 rack on the truck and comes straight back down onto my thigh where it grabs about 4" of skin and starts to wrap it around the sander, which grinds to a halt even tho I can hear the motor trying to run. The trigger switch is on but the trigger is now jammed because it now has a good chunk of my leg in the sander. to get it to really stop creeping the sandpaper across my leg I had to yank the cord out of the wall.

I couldn't wear pants for 2 weeks.


I've come to the conclusion that under no circumstances should any of us be allowed to play with sharp objects, power tools or glue of any type.
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, February 24, 2004 11:40 PM
A little pearl of wisdom taught to me by my flight instructor ...

"Learn from the mistakes of others ... you'll not live long enough to make them all yourself."

I've certainly learned a lot from this thread ... but I can't top Jeff's story!
Bruce
  • Member since
    December 2002
Posted by Bossman on Wednesday, February 25, 2004 11:34 AM
I should re-title this one slightly: "The most recent stupidest modeling thing I've done". (And as a bonus: the most recent grammar violation)

Last night I grabbed a small bottle of new enamel thinner - It looks just like my bottle of decal set ! Who needs to read labels ?

The brit roundel on my 1/72 Fairey Swordfish shriveled and "jellified". Now it looks as if it was beginning to melt and slide off the wing. I haven't quite gotten over it yet. I'm hoping that this post will assist in the greiving process.
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