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Disasters in Modeling

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  • Member since
    June 2013
Disasters in Modeling
Posted by RobGroot4 on Saturday, January 18, 2014 11:27 PM

I thought this might be a fun discussion where we can hopefully learn from each other.  The thought was brought about by my near disastrous dropping of a Revell 1/48 F/A-18C that separated a LEX antenna and the radome while trying to apply Micro Sol;  they were fortunately quickly fixed.  So that kick-started the gummed up wheels and I thought this might be a fun topic.  So what modelling disaster (self-induced or otherwise) triggered some colorful colorful language?  Here's mine:

My junior year of high school I worked at a restaurant; my very first paycheck went toward purchasing the 1/350 Tamiya USS Enterprise.  The beginning of my sophomore year of college I had the thing mostly done and it was sitting on a desk in my room.  The tower was in place, but not glued down, same with the aircraft, and I hadn't weathered anything yet.  My family was moving across town and I was home for the weekend to help.  As I was pulling some books off the shelf above the ship, I had a dictionary stick to one of the books I was pulling out and "hitch-hike" it's way off the shelf.  I'm sure you can all see where this is going.  Somehow, I know Murphy had something to do with that, it landed flat with the tower below it, pretty much crushed flat.  The hull, however, in an incredible physics demonstration of angular momentum, shot sideways off the desk, rotating about the lengthwise axis.  As my [impeccable] luck would have it, the keel was just rotating into the direction of travel as the hull portion struck the corner of my dresser, pretty much snapping the thing almost in half.  I couldn't set up a shot like that if I tried, ever.  So the whole thing went in the trash and we had one less thing to move.  The $%^& dictionary followed it with lots of colorful language. 

Anyways, that's my disaster.  Completely self-inflicted.  For those up for sharing, please do, this could be fun!

Groot

Tags: disasters

"Firing flares while dumping fuel may ruin your day" SH-60B NATOPS

  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: Sonora Desert
Posted by stikpusher on Sunday, January 19, 2014 12:40 AM

More than I care to remember... Ones that stand out are an Army roommates duffle bag falling over off his desk onto mine damaging my M48s suspension. Or an earthquake collapsing my wall mounted display shelves, sending those kits crashing to the ground. Or a couple of kits that caught gusts of wind while being carried from my building are in my old hobby room to the paint area in the garage. There was no internal passage so I had to walk thru the side yard. In both cases, the planes "flew" out of the box and made hard landings onto the concrete breaking off landing gear, etc.

 

F is for FIRE, That burns down the whole town!

U is for URANIUM... BOMBS!

N is for NO SURVIVORS...

       - Plankton

LSM

 

  • Member since
    January 2006
  • From: Sarasota, FL
Posted by RedCorvette on Sunday, January 19, 2014 9:52 AM

Most of my modeling disasters have been self-inflicted, mostly due to lack of skill or patience, but I also had a "moving mishap" a few years ago:

I had a Monogram 1:48 F-14A that I was particularly proud of, finished with V-111 decals from the out of business Fowler Decals.

I had carefully boxed it in a padded box for movers, marking "extremely fragile" on all sides of the box. So naturally the movers packed it in a larger box...along with my wife's table- top sewing machine thrown on top.

The model was flattened like a steam roller had run over it.    

Mark

FSM Charter Subscriber

  • Member since
    August 2012
Posted by JimNTENN on Sunday, January 19, 2014 10:32 AM

Like most of us I've had my share of minor mishaps....probably too numerous to count...that resulted in temporary setbacks. The only major accident....knock on wood...I've had involved Revell's 1/96 Constitution. I don't remember exactly what stage of the build I was at. I just remember that the masts, probably the yard arms, and much of the rigging had already been attached. It was during the warm months of spring or summer and I had the windows open as I've always done during warm weather because I love the fresh air coming in through the windows. I had the model sitting on a table or something in the middle of my hobby room. I can't remember why I had it sitting there because it wasn't where I worked on it. Anyway, I was in the living room and I seem to remember a storm was coming in. The wind had started blowing when it hadn't been earlier. You can probably guess what happened next. Yes, I had the windows in my hobby room open as well with the ship sitting not far from one of them. I heard a crash and quickly ran to the hobby room to find Old Ironsides lying on her side on the floor. Talk about your heart skipping a beat. I expected the model of the famous warship I'd worked so hard on to be a lost cause. Fortunately, as I picked it up, I found very little damage. I think maybe one of the masts or yardarms was broken but it was nothing that was beyond repair. While it wasn't a disaster, so to speak, the experience of hearing it crashing to the floor and the raw fear of the destruction I thought I would find was something of a disaster to my nerves. Needless to say, the ship never got finished and it wasn't due to the near tragedy. I'd worked on it pretty intensely for about 2 years and got myself so burnt out on it that I decided to take a break and haven't touched it since. That was back in the late '90s and it still sits in a corner of my work bench collecting dust.

Current project(s): Hobby Boss: 1/72 F9F-2 Panther

                                  Midwest Products: Skiff(wood model)

                                  

  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: Sonora Desert
Posted by stikpusher on Sunday, January 19, 2014 11:09 AM

I have moved twice in the last three years. The movers are not allowed to touch my model stuff.

 

F is for FIRE, That burns down the whole town!

U is for URANIUM... BOMBS!

N is for NO SURVIVORS...

       - Plankton

LSM

 

  • Member since
    January 2013
Posted by BlackSheepTwoOneFour on Sunday, January 19, 2014 11:30 AM

Want to hear mine? Warning: this is painful to read. Years ago when I was 1 - 25 years old, I got the famous Budweiser wagon train complete with Clydesdale horses, Remember that? Anyways, I spent about 2 weeks putting this bad boy together. When finished, I had it displayed on a shelf in the living room.

Now my mom is known to do housework every single day. So one day she was dusting the furniture, shelving, etc.. She picks this Budweiser wagon train kit off the shelf, put it on the table, dust the shelf. When she went to put it back, it slipped out of her hands and it crashed to the hardwood floor, smashing it to pieces.

I can't remember whether I was home at the time it happened or at school but in however way I found out what had happened, I went pretty upset. I was angry with my mom and didn't speak to her for weeks. Hey I was a kid, whattya want from me? LOL!

Needless to say, I couldn't put the pieces back together because it was a mess - I mean everything was broken even the wagon wheels and spokes, etc.... I ended up tossing it out. I was really crushed. How I wish I can do another one like it.

  • Member since
    December 2004
  • From: Houston, Texas
Posted by panzerpilot on Sunday, January 19, 2014 1:13 PM

Several years ago, I had a modelling project turn into a woodworking project. Spilled an entire bottle of cement on the dining room table.

Back when I was using my siphon cup airbrush, I had the paint cup, full of paint, come loose and fall directly on the tank I was trying to paint.

-Tom

  • Member since
    February 2006
  • From: Smithers, BC, Canada
Posted by ruddratt on Sunday, January 19, 2014 6:23 PM

Similar to stiks experience, I had 3 wall-mounted shelves come crashing down, but not during an earthquake --- we were watching the movie "Gremlins".  Yeah, it was a bit freaky.

Mike

 "We have our own ammunition. It's filled with paint. When we fire it, it makes pretty pictures....scares the hell outta people."

 

  • Member since
    June 2004
  • From: 29° 58' N 95° 21' W
Posted by seasick on Sunday, January 19, 2014 10:59 PM

I lost about ⅓ of my 1/700 (and 1/720) collection in a move. All of my JMSDF ships, and my modern USN took a beating. Lots of others I had to fix. My other ships suffered RMS Titanic, RMS Queen Mary, HMS Challenger, HMS Bounty, Cutty Sark, my ice breaker, NS Savanna. destroyed.  I rebuilt lots of stuff using photoetch in place of broken plastic mast, some some ships came out better.

Somebody decided to fix my F/A-18F Super Hornet by straightening out the ordinance I put in the wrong (right place). Censored

A book case collapse in 1992 destroyed the aircraft of my 1/48 collection that I had decided to keep after disposing poorly built kits.  A different book case in the same location destroyed my model ships and  ½ my aircraft in 1980.

Chasing the ultimate build.

  • Member since
    February 2007
Posted by mitsdude on Monday, January 20, 2014 1:00 AM

In my younger days I had just finished the complete rigging with sails of the 1/96 Revell Museum Classics U.S.S. CONSTITUTION. My girl friend (who I really really REALLY liked) wanted to come over to my house to see me but had to bring her 6 year old brother whom she was baby sitting. He brought his new basket ball with him and within 5 minutes the Constitution landed upside down on the floor from a 5ft height after being hit by a bouncing ball.CryingAngryBig Smile

  • Member since
    January 2007
Posted by the doog on Monday, January 20, 2014 10:10 AM

Wow, what an interesting thread!

My biggest modeling disaster just happened last year. I was building what is one of my absolute favorite cars, an AMT AMX Javelin SST. I don't know if you've ever priced one of these old rarities on eBay--there's one on there now as a "Buy It Now" for $150--this particular model cost me around $120 to snare. I couldn't wait to build it and put it on the shelf in that Cranberry Purple color that they had back then.

Anyway, I made two "rookie mistakes" of first priming it with Tamiya primer under a very "hot" lacquer paint from Model Car World, and then airbrushing one a hot summer afternoon. When the lacquer dried, it looked like one of those "sand" textured paints. It was actually like fine sandpaper. There was no way to save it, or strip that lacquer. And sanding it down would have removed half the detail.

It "met the boot" as I term that rare incidence when my fiancee asks me "How's your model going"? Whistling

  • Member since
    January 2006
  • From: Earth
Posted by DiscoStu on Monday, January 20, 2014 10:54 AM

I was working on the Hobbyboss F-105D that I sunk a lot of money into, resin cockpit, rare decals, complete Eduard PE set.  Things were progressing nicely when, unbeknownst to me, my cleaning pot for my airbrush was leaking and there was a pool of various solvents on my workbench.  I set both upper wings on the bench not realizing I just set them in said pool.  When I finally noticed, the upper surfaces of both wings were completely melted.  I attempted to sand down and re-scribe the wings but the plastic was now so soft that the tool I used to rescribe went straight through.

"Ahh the Luftwaffe. The Washington Generals of the History Channel" -Homer Simpson

  

 

  • Member since
    March 2005
  • From: Lancaster, South Carolina
Posted by Devil Dawg on Monday, January 20, 2014 12:42 PM

Mine is "indirectly" self-inflicted - Got divorced a few years ago, and before I could go retrieve my models from my now ex-wife, she decided to take out her frustrations on them. If I remember correctly, she took out about 10 models by throwing them against the walls, stomping them, etc. - whatever way she could think to inflict some pain on me, and make herself feel better at the time. In retrospect, I guess I would've done the same thing if I was her. I had a Hasegawa two-seater F-16, a couple of Tamiya F4Us, a Hasegawa Rufe, Tamiya F4D, and a few others I can't exactly recall anymore. On the bright side, I instantly had more display space available!!

Devil Dawg

On The Bench: Tamiya 1/32nd Mitsubishi A6M5 Model 52 Zeke For Japanese Group Build

Build one at a time? Hah! That'll be the day!!

  • Member since
    June 2004
  • From: 29° 58' N 95° 21' W
Posted by seasick on Monday, January 20, 2014 8:35 PM

withdrawn

Chasing the ultimate build.

  • Member since
    November 2003
  • From: State of Mississippi. State motto: Virtute et armis (By valor and arms)
Posted by mississippivol on Monday, January 20, 2014 8:36 PM

I had a cat wipe out a whole flight line back in the '80's...

  • Member since
    June 2013
Posted by RobGroot4 on Monday, January 20, 2014 9:22 PM

Reading the injuries sustained while modelling thread I thought of another good one.  When I was in High School I was building one of the Italieri models of the aircraft carrier my dad was stationed on, and despite laying down an old shower curtain on the floor of my room for overspray, I managed to end up with a faint dark red border around the curtain on the carpet.  As it turns out, paint thinner makes red paint brighter when it's on carpet!

The reason the injuries thread brought it to mind was my mom's reaction to said stain on the carpet.  I ended up with a fairly large dark red oval.  I got it pretty faint, but the carpet was eventually replaced.

Groot

"Firing flares while dumping fuel may ruin your day" SH-60B NATOPS

  • Member since
    June 2013
  • From: Jax, FL
Posted by Viejo on Monday, January 20, 2014 9:51 PM

When I was fifteen, I had spent about nine months working on a Revell USCG Eagle.  I'd been taking extra care with all the details, and was about halfway thru the rigging.  Even those stupid white plastic sails had been cut and mounted with care.  As I recall, the bow half of the rigging was finished (or very close) and I had yet to complete the stern.

While at school one day, my Mom opened my window (we lived in North Dakota and it was the first fifty degree day in MONTHS) to air out the house, and the cutter sailed right off my chest of drawers.  Bow sprit, two forward masts broken, all the spars broken, and it all held together by a knot of thread that I'd had been using for the rig.

  • Member since
    January 2012
  • From: Barrie, Ontario
Posted by Cdn Colin on Thursday, January 23, 2014 4:04 PM

I find there are two kinds of disasters.  Rapid onset disasters, where something suddenly spills or goes explodes; and slow onset disasters, like when you realize that you've assembled something wrong and can't fix it.

I build 1/48 scale WW2 fighters.

Have fun.

  • Member since
    February 2011
  • From: Bent River, IA
Posted by Reasoned on Monday, January 27, 2014 11:20 PM

Disaster?  Hmm

Mono B-36, enough said.

Science is the pursiut of knowledge, faith is the pursuit of wisdom.  Peace be with you.

On the Tarmac: 1/48 Revell P-38

In the Hanger: A bunch of kits

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Fort Knox
Posted by Rob Gronovius on Tuesday, January 28, 2014 8:53 AM

stikpusher

I have moved twice in the last three years. The movers are not allowed to touch my model stuff.

When I moved from Fort Dix, New Jersey to Hanscom Air Force Base, Massachusetts, I had a box of partially built tanks and a couple of planes I planned to hand carry in the car and a box of various spray paints the movers would not transport. Both were set aside and were labeled "Do Not Pack" and put in an area (empty dining room) that we designated the no pack area.

Some time when no one was watching, the movers decided to pack these two boxes by putting the heavier, but smaller paint box inside the built kit box. They pushed the paint box down on top of the built kits crushing them good so they could close the box and tape it up.

The tank kits that got crushed were the Gunze Sangyo M60A1 RISE/Passive with ERA (a very expensive plastic & white metal kit), a Trumpter M60A1 (a $20 kit) and a couple of Monogram reissue 1/48 scale WW2 fighters.

  • Member since
    November 2003
  • From: Naples, FL
Posted by tempestjohnny on Tuesday, January 28, 2014 3:26 PM

I hope the movers paid for the damaged stuff

 

  • Member since
    June 2013
Posted by RobGroot4 on Tuesday, January 28, 2014 3:53 PM

Wasn't the B-36 in general a disaster? Big Smile

"Firing flares while dumping fuel may ruin your day" SH-60B NATOPS

  • Member since
    November 2003
  • From: State of Mississippi. State motto: Virtute et armis (By valor and arms)
Posted by mississippivol on Tuesday, January 28, 2014 4:01 PM

RobGroot4

Wasn't the B-36 in general a disaster? Big Smile

I understand it did it's duty quite well in providing shade to the tarmacs down in Texas!Whistling

  • Member since
    December 2013
Posted by mad rabbit on Saturday, February 1, 2014 11:19 AM
I have been working on a series of Tamiya 1/32 planes, the last one being the P51. It was almost finished and at the decalling stage - sitting on my work bench when I noticed that I hadn't screwed the top back on the bottle of solvent cement I had been using, reaching for the bottle I knocked it off the shelf. ..the rest is obvious.
Guess I'll have to build another. ..(see-a silver lining)
  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Fort Knox
Posted by Rob Gronovius on Sunday, February 2, 2014 3:11 PM

tempestjohnny

I hope the movers paid for the damaged stuff

The only time I've ever had to submit a claim for items damaged by movers was when I moved to and from New Jersey.

  • Member since
    January 2014
Posted by Silver on Saturday, March 29, 2014 5:33 PM
My disaster was when a judge dropped a small flashlight light on my contest entry and destroyed it.I had no problem getting first place then.
  • Member since
    November 2008
  • From: Central Florida
Posted by plasticjunkie on Saturday, March 29, 2014 8:14 PM

Not a major or complete disaster but still a painful experience. I built a 1/350 Tamiya Battleship back in the early 1980's when pe details were not around. I used Walthers brass railroad ladders as the railings and made my own radar screens out of thin plastic mesh. She came out very nice. Fast forward to 1995 when my present wife was painting the living room with the help of her brother who went to move my prized battlewagon encased in a specially built glass and wood case that I made. He didn't know that the top glass portion came off the bottom base. He picked it up from the top part, and of course  :eek:  the bottom wood base stayed on for a couple of seconds till it finally dropped about a foot or so. All the life boats came off, along with several railing sections and the main mast was sheared along with all the rigging.

My model had survived several moves, one divorce and several near disasters till that day. :Cry:  I still have the model, wounded and in need of repair. I will get to it eventually one of these days.

 GIFMaker.org_jy_Ayj_O

 

 

Too many models to build, not enough time in a lifetime!!

  • Member since
    March 2009
Posted by Gaston on Saturday, March 29, 2014 11:45 PM

The friction lasting for a second is the thing to avoid: The same thing happened to me with another's ship, but at least there the damage amounted to a flag pole...

Gaston

  • Member since
    July 2013
Posted by Razor04 on Sunday, March 30, 2014 9:59 AM
My worst happened quite recently.

I recently got back into modeling and went on a binge of building. Ihad completed a sbd dauntless, 2 mh-60k, a spitfire, a p-51 and a b17g. All in 1:48.

My wife one day decided that the models were taking up too much space and needed to store them tomake room for Christmas decorations. her way of doing this was to throw all of them in a plastic trash bag and put them in a box in the storage shed.

Needless to say I got back from work to find a mess of tangled props and cracked fuselages.

Not a fun day
  • Member since
    June 2009
Posted by jimbot58 on Sunday, March 30, 2014 5:43 PM

That's got to be a tough one being it's the wife....

I have enough disaster stories to fill a book, but I'll just add one that was inflicted by a family member.

I was in my early 20's and still living at the folks. (Yeah, I know!) One day, while at work, my dad decided he would paint the ceiling in my room. No advance notice, no chance to prepare.

He was always the type who believed in getting these projects done in as little time as possible and waste no time with things like masking, paint tarps, drop cloths, etc. He would paint over anything like hinges, light switches, outlets, etc.

I came home to find that not only were some things broken, but the worst was everything in my room was covered with paint splatters, and those little droplets of paint that go everywhere when using a roller! This included my furniture, stereo equipment, and my small model collection! I ended up tossing some of them out. Latex paint does not easily come off when dry!

Somehow, I was the bad guy because I got mad and didn't appreciate what he did for me....

Jim

*******

On my workbench now:

It's all about classic cars now!

Why can't I find the "Any" key on my keyboard?

 

 

 

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