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The Ostfront (eastern front) GB 2010/11

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  • Member since
    September 2008
  • From: Ancaster, Ontario
Posted by maxfax on Monday, April 11, 2011 9:37 PM

I got the base coat on using a slightly darkened MM Russian Armour Green, lightened with white in the centres of the panels. Finished making the tracks today at work (it was a slow day- good for doing stuff like this but bad for business!) and tried one on to verify the number of links. I'll place a coat of Future tomorrow, then start the washing. Hopefully by this week-end I'll get to try that "Blacken it" solution for the tracks.

 

thanks,

Rob

On the bench:  Revell 1/72 HCMS Snowberry

 

 

  • Member since
    June 2009
  • From: Netherlands
Posted by kermit on Monday, April 11, 2011 11:24 PM

Rob,

Just loooove the shading you did on that destroyer! I prefer this technique over preshading myself as it never turns out the way this technique does. So... wouldn't this be called post shading?

Been thinking about doing another armor build myself and try that dot filter thing...

Anyways, great job sofar buddyYesBig Smile

Richard

"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm." - Sir Winston Churchill

  • Member since
    December 2006
  • From: t.r.f. mn.
Posted by detailfreak on Monday, April 11, 2011 11:28 PM

                         Hey Rob the SU-100 is looking mighty fine,will be watchin for the big finish.Cool

                                            Greg"Detailfreak"RowleyYes

[View:http://s172.photobucket.com/albums/w1/g-earl828/]  http://i158.photobucket.com/albums/t104/cycledupes/1000Roadwheels4BuildBadge.jpg

  • Member since
    March 2010
  • From: Brisbane
Posted by Julez72 on Wednesday, April 13, 2011 7:09 PM

Rob, lovely shading, very well done...I'm thinking about trying that method, i've been preshading for years and i'm the type that gets stuck in his ways but the postshading method gives mouth wateribg results..

 

 

 

  • Member since
    September 2008
  • From: Ancaster, Ontario
Posted by maxfax on Thursday, April 14, 2011 10:17 AM

Has anyone used "Blacken-it" for tracks? I tried it last night- I don't think the result is that great, and I can do a better job with pain and washes and pigments. Oh, well- it was worth a try. I think I will still need to paint them to get the look I want.

Rob

On the bench:  Revell 1/72 HCMS Snowberry

 

 

  • Member since
    April 2009
  • From: Carmel, IN
Posted by deafpanzer on Thursday, April 14, 2011 12:56 PM

Rob, outstanding work on your SU-100... pre-shading job really has done its job! 

Guys, I have been following all of this and it has been a great GB.  I just wanted to let y'all know I am still planning to build my Tamiya Panzer IV Ausf H that I signed up.  I will jump in as soon as I am done with my current build M24 Chaffee. 

3 months left... Whistling

Andy

  • Member since
    June 2010
  • From: Austin, TX
Posted by DoogsATX on Friday, April 15, 2011 10:47 AM

Rob - that beast is looking nice! Love the shading and the pretty, pretty friuls! Just had my first adventure with them for my Achilles, and discovered that they don't fit with the AFV Club drive sprockets...oh well, back in the box to await another VVSS build (I've been eyeing Dragon's M7...and the T51 track is more appropriate than the T49s it ships with).

Also, I'm about the get cracking on the LaGG. Soaked the parts last night and played around with some very general test-fitting. So far, it feels like a mashup of the Zvezda La-5 (engraved detail, plastic "feel") and the Eduard Yak-3 (low parts count, no locating pins). Fit looks to be good in some places, less so in others (especially the upper cowl). 

Should be an interesting build.

On the Bench: 1/32 Trumpeter P-47 | 1/32 Hasegawa Bf 109G | 1/144 Eduard MiG-21MF x2

On Deck:  1/350 HMS Dreadnought

Blog/Completed Builds: doogsmodels.com

 

  • Member since
    April 2005
Posted by Thunderbolt379 on Monday, April 18, 2011 4:06 AM

I promised I'd get back to my builds for this GB, and today I made some progress on the Bf 109. I added the thickened windshield and repaired a flap that parted company too easily, and applied the Eduard mask set. They can be a bit costly, I suppose, but they are soooo much easier than messing on with tiny bits of tape. As someone who has done the tape route on two builds in a row, the masks come as a welcome change:

RLM 66 on the frames, then into the spraybooth... Eventually!

Cheers, Mike/TB379

http://worldinminiature.blogspot.com/

  • Member since
    June 2009
  • From: Netherlands
Posted by kermit on Monday, April 18, 2011 11:12 AM

Maxfax,

Personally i haven't used "blacken it" before, let alone on the friul tracks but in my wooden shipbuilding days we used to use that kinda stuff (i use Birchwood Casey's "brass black" for brass and copper) to make the ugly brass (=golden) cannon black as they are supposed to look.

Isn't that kind of stuff meant for brass and copper? In any case it is highly advised to degrease your tracks thoroughly and handle em with tweezers after that as the solution absolutely hates grease. Dip em in the stuff... wait for a bit.... rinse and wipe off the yucky stuff. Repeat if neccessary.

Sorry m8, only used it on brass but it did do the trick for me.

Doogs,

Would LOVE to see that Lagg3 come to life. They just look cool even if they weren't that good as fighting material to work with... 

Mike,

Good to see you back my friend. Masking looks top notch . The eduard masks do work like a charm. Only used once on the I16 i did for this group... I don't mind fiddling with pieces of tape and cutting em to size. I find it a relaxing chore...watching a dvd in the meantime... Guess i am weird like that LOLBig Smile

Richard

"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm." - Sir Winston Churchill

  • Member since
    June 2010
  • From: Austin, TX
Posted by DoogsATX on Monday, April 18, 2011 2:09 PM

kermit

Doogs,

Would LOVE to see that Lagg3 come to life. They just look cool even if they weren't that good as fighting material to work with... 

It's coming! First thing on the list is doing up the wood cockpit with aluminum lacquer. Still not sure what I want to do there. Part of me thinks Alclad, but another part is considering mixing some light gray into MM Aluminum or something.

Also, the more I stare at the actual plane I'm building, the crazier it gets. Not only is the canopy missing (apparently they removed them because the glass was so poor), but if you look, the lower section of the gear doors have been removed as well. Still not sure exactly why (any attempt to lighten the underpowered beast?), but I'm contemplating picking up the external PE set since the kit doors are relatively thick.

On the Bench: 1/32 Trumpeter P-47 | 1/32 Hasegawa Bf 109G | 1/144 Eduard MiG-21MF x2

On Deck:  1/350 HMS Dreadnought

Blog/Completed Builds: doogsmodels.com

 

  • Member since
    April 2005
Posted by Thunderbolt379 on Friday, April 22, 2011 10:12 AM

A tad more progress on the 109, gents. The interior colour was sprayed on the canopy struts (the canopy was not a very good fit, frankly, and I was amazed to see how scratched it was when I got back to this kit...):

And while I had the dark grey in the AB, I went on and preshaded the whole airframe:

I'm not sure how much of that will show through, I'm still very new to this technique.

Cheers, Mike/TB379

http://worldinminiature.blogspot.com/

  • Member since
    June 2010
  • From: Austin, TX
Posted by DoogsATX on Sunday, April 24, 2011 10:13 AM

Proof that the LaGG-3 kit actually exists and is underway.

I'd kinda been hoping to aim this one toward the contest route - the local contest is doing a "1941" theme this year. But I don't know if this is the kit - or rather - I don't have the skills to make this kit into a contest winner. Still planning to have plenty of fun with it, though!

The inside ran into some issues when I tried using Alclad's gloss black base. Why dear god do I keep giving that stuff a chance? Hate hate hate. Thank god it's just supposed to represent lacquered wood, not actual bare metal.

 

On the Bench: 1/32 Trumpeter P-47 | 1/32 Hasegawa Bf 109G | 1/144 Eduard MiG-21MF x2

On Deck:  1/350 HMS Dreadnought

Blog/Completed Builds: doogsmodels.com

 

  • Member since
    September 2008
  • From: Ancaster, Ontario
Posted by maxfax on Tuesday, April 26, 2011 8:28 PM

I have finished the Su-100. The photos seem to exaggerate some of the weathering and colours of the pigments- it looks much different and more uniform sitting in front of me. Overall the build was fairly easy. I weathered with several washes of burnt umber and lamp black, and various Mig pigments, and lots of dry brushing with light gray. I am working on a Spit at the moment, but may add an il-2 on skiis in a month or so to this GB.

thanks

Rob

On the bench:  Revell 1/72 HCMS Snowberry

 

 

  • Member since
    March 2009
  • From: East Bay, CA
Posted by Lundergaard on Wednesday, April 27, 2011 11:25 AM

rob that su-100 looks great!  well done!

are those friuls?  tracks look really nice.

cheers

andy (lundergaard)

  • Member since
    September 2008
  • From: Ancaster, Ontario
Posted by maxfax on Wednesday, April 27, 2011 11:55 AM

Thanks, Andy

Yes, they are Fruils, and I would not use anything else. I tried the "Magic Tracks" with other Dragon kits and I don't like working with them- there is nothing magic about them. I have a Tiger to build with DS tracks, but they don't look as good as Fruils- already bought a set for it.

On the bench:  Revell 1/72 HCMS Snowberry

 

 

  • Member since
    March 2009
  • From: East Bay, CA
Posted by Lundergaard on Wednesday, April 27, 2011 12:11 PM

I used Friuls on my T-34 and it worked brilliantly.

I'm working on Tasca's M4A3E8 right now and i have to say... their T66 tracks build up very nicely!  rather surprised since they are styrene.  but assembled carefully they are fully workable and pretty durable.  but... you have to check each track bottom to make sure the tiny pins are present from the mold.  Out of some 160+ links, only 3 were missing their pins.  plenty to finish the tracks with leftovers.

I've read enough tutorials to not even want to go down the frustrating road with Magic tracks.  pun intended.

  • Member since
    September 2008
  • From: Ancaster, Ontario
Posted by maxfax on Thursday, April 28, 2011 10:00 AM

Andy,

Are those tracks on your M4A3 similar to Fruils requiring using a wire to put them together? Snap together tracks would be nice- do they even exist? I have never made a kit from other than the "big" model companies- what is the quality like?

Rob

On the bench:  Revell 1/72 HCMS Snowberry

 

 

  • Member since
    June 2010
  • From: Austin, TX
Posted by DoogsATX on Thursday, April 28, 2011 10:07 AM

maxfax

Andy,

Are those tracks on your M4A3 similar to Fruils requiring using a wire to put them together? Snap together tracks would be nice- do they even exist? I have never made a kit from other than the "big" model companies- what is the quality like?

Rob

I've got Tasca's Easy Eight in the stash and if I'm remembering it correctly, each link is actually a multi-piece affair. I'd been planning to go the Fruil route, but may give them a go now that someone's had success with them.

Meanwhile, the WORST tracks I've ever encountered are the styrene tracks in Dragon/Cyber-Hobby's orange box Firefly Vc. Individual track pads and individual track connectors. There's literally no way that I can see to make them in any way workable, and for that kind of PITA assembly, that's just inexcusable.

On the Bench: 1/32 Trumpeter P-47 | 1/32 Hasegawa Bf 109G | 1/144 Eduard MiG-21MF x2

On Deck:  1/350 HMS Dreadnought

Blog/Completed Builds: doogsmodels.com

 

  • Member since
    March 2009
  • From: East Bay, CA
Posted by Lundergaard on Thursday, April 28, 2011 10:32 AM

Doogs is right on the money.  The Tasca Easy 8 T66 tracks are two pieces.  The piece that would touch the ground has these tiny tiny pins in 4 places.  To assemble you layout masking tape and lay each bottom piece on with the pins in the receiving grooves, front to back, repeat, etc.  then you just glue the very simple top piece of each link on and it completes the enclosure of the pins within the grooves.  i am impressed.  but again, the caveat is make sure the bottom piece has their pins intact.  found a pic... if they showed the bottom you would see grooves on the opposite side of the pins on the inside.

the kit itself so far is excellent.  no flash and typical mold seams here and there but nothing sinister.  the cooling jacket for the .50 cal is brilliantly molded.  i guess slide mold technology was used.  there are a LOT of parts but the instructions do a great job of showing you different angles for assemblies that aren't totally clear from the usual 45 deg top angle.

andy

  • Member since
    June 2010
  • From: Austin, TX
Posted by DoogsATX on Thursday, April 28, 2011 10:40 AM

Their .50 cal is something else, isn't it? Built the standalone kit one for my Achilles and was absolutely boggled when I realized the main body and cooling jacket just kind of slide right off the sprue. How did they manage that?

Also...it builds up very well...

 

 

On the Bench: 1/32 Trumpeter P-47 | 1/32 Hasegawa Bf 109G | 1/144 Eduard MiG-21MF x2

On Deck:  1/350 HMS Dreadnought

Blog/Completed Builds: doogsmodels.com

 

  • Member since
    March 2009
  • From: East Bay, CA
Posted by Lundergaard on Thursday, April 28, 2011 10:53 AM

doogs that thing looks kick a$$!  cant wait to work on that.

all i can think is that little elves in the tasca factory hand carve the cooling jacket and slip it onto a piece of sprue as the final stages of production... ha!  no idea but would like to find out.

  • Member since
    June 2009
  • From: Netherlands
Posted by kermit on Thursday, April 28, 2011 10:55 AM

Doogs,

That .50 kicks *ss indeed but what strikes me most is the clarity of the picture you took. Can i bother you with asking what setup you use for your modeling pictures? Your picture taking skills are something that (besides the models ofcourse; goes without saying...) intrigue me...

Richard

"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm." - Sir Winston Churchill

  • Member since
    June 2010
  • From: Austin, TX
Posted by DoogsATX on Thursday, April 28, 2011 11:08 AM

kermit

Doogs,

That .50 kicks *ss indeed but what strikes me most is the clarity of the picture you took. Can i bother you with asking what setup you use for your modeling pictures? Your picture taking skills are something that (besides the models ofcourse; goes without saying...) intrigue me...

Richard

Thanks Richard!

The setup took a bit of trial and error, but it's shockingly simple.

One sheet of posterboard and four lights. Two "photography" lights (picked them up for $40 or so on Amazon) at 9 and 3, and two of those clamp-on shop lights at 5 and 7.

For the camera itself, I'm shooting with a Nikon D300s and a fixed 35mm lens. Settings are something like f/22 and 1/4 second exposure...gives a nice long depth of field so there aren't any short focus issues.

I always shoot in RAW and adjust color temp, sharpness, etc, on my computer using Apple Aperture. RAW gives a lot more wiggle room than jpegs.

Here's a pretty direct comparison...one was taken about halfway through the pigments, and the other when all was said and done, but you can really see the difference.

This will be my last post of non-Ostfront images, I promise!

On the Bench: 1/32 Trumpeter P-47 | 1/32 Hasegawa Bf 109G | 1/144 Eduard MiG-21MF x2

On Deck:  1/350 HMS Dreadnought

Blog/Completed Builds: doogsmodels.com

 

  • Member since
    September 2008
  • From: Ancaster, Ontario
Posted by maxfax on Thursday, April 28, 2011 2:26 PM

Kermit: Please mark my two tanks as finished. I'm going to add another- an Accurate Miniatures 1/48 il-2 Sturmovik on skiis. I'm in the Spit GB so it will be a month or two before I start it. I think I will use a whitewash finish like on the box cover, and perhaps use the hairspray technique to weather it.

Rob

On the bench:  Revell 1/72 HCMS Snowberry

 

 

  • Member since
    July 2008
  • From: USA California
Posted by vetteman42 on Friday, April 29, 2011 5:56 PM

Man all these great tanks one day I will work up the courage to build one or 2 or maybe ..................

Next up on my bench after finishing my F-15 build is a Yak-7A Yeah I have been waiting to get started on this one.

Randy So many to build.......So little time

  • Member since
    February 2010
Posted by ozzman on Saturday, April 30, 2011 3:10 PM

hi everyone! My Dora is well underway, sorry there is no pictures, I will post some later.

Kermit: Can you please sign me up for a Tiger I ausf E late production (Tamiya)

thank you,

ozzman

  • Member since
    June 2009
  • From: Netherlands
Posted by kermit on Saturday, April 30, 2011 11:52 PM

Ozzman,

Sure thing buddy. I will put you on the front pageWink

Richard

"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm." - Sir Winston Churchill

  • Member since
    June 2010
  • From: Austin, TX
Posted by DoogsATX on Sunday, May 1, 2011 3:50 PM

vetteman42

Man all these great tanks one day I will work up the courage to build one or 2 or maybe ..................

Next up on my bench after finishing my F-15 build is a Yak-7A Yeah I have been waiting to get started on this one.

Do it, man! Tanks are fun and a nice break from the flying things.

The biggest bugbear for me was always the tracks...had a few bad experiences that swore me off plastic tracks forever. Thankfully these days, a lot of kits have pretty nice rubber bands (Dragon's DS tracks, Tasca, Tamiya...AFV Club if they made them the right size), and there's always the metal option. Tedious, but the bit that I built was actually really easy to assemble. 

I still won't touch indy or link-and-length plastic tracks, but I may have to give the T66 links with the Easy 8 a chance before I bail to fruils...

On the Bench: 1/32 Trumpeter P-47 | 1/32 Hasegawa Bf 109G | 1/144 Eduard MiG-21MF x2

On Deck:  1/350 HMS Dreadnought

Blog/Completed Builds: doogsmodels.com

 

  • Member since
    June 2010
  • From: Austin, TX
Posted by DoogsATX on Sunday, May 1, 2011 3:53 PM

Well, the LaGG-3 progresses. Cockpit is mostly done and I'm hoping to join the fuselage tonight. So far this kit is extremely decent. Nothing's really blowing me away, but nothing is head-smackingly bad, either. Have to say I had a lot more fun with Zvezda's La-5...maybe they'll backtrack and pick up the LaGG at some point in the future.

Also, Richard, would you kindly remove my 109F-2 for now, and add a 1/35 Dragon Panzer IV Ausf. G? Washed the sprues off today and may be starting on it tonight if we actually end up getting rain.

On the Bench: 1/32 Trumpeter P-47 | 1/32 Hasegawa Bf 109G | 1/144 Eduard MiG-21MF x2

On Deck:  1/350 HMS Dreadnought

Blog/Completed Builds: doogsmodels.com

 

  • Member since
    February 2010
  • From: Berkeley CA/St. Paul MN
Posted by EBergerud on Sunday, May 1, 2011 9:45 PM

Max

I just bought a AM 1/48 IL-2 which I gather is a reissue. The older board comments ranged from "incredibly bad" to "a great kit if you ignore the instructions."  Anything I should know that could save sanding, filling and cursing?

Eric

 

A model boat is much cheaper than a real one and won't sink with you in it.

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