Jump to content

Aurora Mark

Members
  • Content Count

    483
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Aurora Mark

  1. I have found that here in Nova Scotia, cutting Future 10:2:1 of 10 parts Future, 2 parts distilled water and 1 part windex works great. I spray using a wide cone with my airbrush at 20-22 PSI. Once done I clean my airbrush with Windex.

    To make it dull, I substitue 1 part of Future for 1 part of Tamiya dull. At 5:5 of future and dull though, I find that it then gets easier to just spray Tamiya dull in coats to get the same results.

    I hope this helps.

    Mark.

  2. I'm starting to feel pretty bad about not having any photographs to share with you guys right now. But truth be told, it's all just more numbers on a paper. With another adventure out of country coming up here in a couple days there really isn't much that I will be able to post with regards to building. However, I did try a spare piece of the rectangular brass I used for the spar box, and with just a bit of heat, it bends itself very nicely to the desired angle. So, with that now answered, knowing that the two spars can be single pieces, this definitely makes life much easier.

    Once I'm back home, it'll be straight to relaxing with this model for a bit, and at the very least getting the fuselage taken care of just as mentioned above. And then! And then there will be pictures, hahaha.

    All the best folks.

    Cheers for now,

    Mark.

  3. You work is absolutely fantastic. I cannot stress enough how impressed I am with the work and detail you are putting into the cockpit. From someone who has a deep enjoyment in building the cockpits more than anything else on the kit, I really appreciate the detail you're sharing with us.

    I'm really looking forward to this one coming together!

    Cheers,

    Mark.

  4. Might be the case. And there are a lot of emotions and opinions connected to this. I just wanted to make sure that this was something credible.

    Truth is, there are a lot of infantiers here in Canada who are going to be extremely happy about this. I can't tell you how many times in my tours we were very, very, very happy to have the A-10 overhead, and how many times if not for what they were able to do... ...well... things would have been very difficult for a number of us.

    Thank you guys for answering my question.

    Cheers,

    Mark.

  5. Ah, always changing... just going over the main wheels/landing gear, and the initial plan of a 3 piece wheel won't work. With the centre of the hubs between each side of the rim hollow, it looks like it'll need to be a brass rim with a resin tire.

    More to follow soon.

  6. Yes, there are some incredible details on a number of resin parts out there. By concern though comes from many of these being made in a manner that involves many more pieces and tools than I currently have.

    Without the use of vacuum pots, or pressure pots, and having just the pour technique available to use, I'm worried about partial castings or bubbles rearing their ugly heads.

  7. Folks,

    I'm going to start making masters for some of the parts I plan on casting in resin for my 1/48 CP-140 Aurora. The larger parts (like spinners, landing gear wheels, and so on) aren't much of a concern with this question. But for pour casting smaller details, how small is too small, and would best be left to adding scratch built pieces afterwards?

    A good example would be the rims of the tires for example. I plan each wheel being 3 parts; the main rubber, and each rim half. On these rims are nuts and bolts that would be cast at about 1mm or so. Would it be realistic to make these on the master, or better to just have them glued on after the resin piece is cast.

    Any help, advice and input is welcomed.

    Cheers,

    Mark.

  8. Interesting photograph. It also appears (and correct me if I'm wrong) that the insignia on the fuselage of the green-nosed P-40N facing the camera does not have the red outline.

  9. My thoughts on this, well I build for building's sake, not for display only. Meaning that while yes, I do like to have finished builds to display and perhaps show people, but the main reason I build models is the journey and learning experience of the building. So sure, I'll sometimes try to add some detail that can't be seen when finished but it's just because I might like what that detail is and want to try to figure out how to do it. I mean, if building models is only about having a shelf display piece then why not skip the building all together and just buy a die cast or pre-built kit. At least that's my personal feeling. In no way am I saying it's wrong to not detail or to build out of the box. Not at all, it's what you desire that matters.

    Bill

    Bill, I like what you wrote there.

    The Il-2 I'm working on is fun, and I really enjoyed going at the cockpit and gunner position. But aside from flaps and a little scratch building to make it a photo-recce aircraft it is stock, because that was about all I was looking for. The Spitfire is an Eduard venture with seeing what can be made of their model. The Aurora on the other hand, that one is special for me for a number of reasons.

    Flying on the aircraft, wanting to scratch build, never having done any form of vac-form kits, and seeing what I can do, all those reasons are driving me with this build. And I look forward to learning more about the aircraft I work on than I normally would have. Call it a sense of pride in the fleet, or just a childs interest in the type (I've been a fan of the CP-140/P-3 since first seeing one as a young little kid at an airshow back home)... but, this one is special. And that's why a lot of stop that would normally be in place are being pulled out.

    But, there is a limit to that one. As much as I'd love to build the latrine, it wont be seen, so the detail and work that would normally be put into something like that would be added somewhere else... at the end of the day though, it'll all be with a big ole grin on my face.

    Cheers,

    Mark.

  10. Thank you for your input, I really appreciate it. This is definitely giving me a lot of good insight into what type of lathe I'll be looking at picking up. Thankfully for the next few projects I don't just need one yet, but soon... so I suppose it's time to start collecting the beans for a purchase in the future.

    Cheers,

    Mark.

  11. Thank you everyone!

    I'm still looking at needing to have the custom set made for the Aurora, however for other projects these folks seem to offer a lot.

    It's a crying shame about HD, as they really seemed to be on the right track. I know I've got a couple sets from them (for the Spitfire) and am looking forward to using them.

    Nuts, I guess that's just how it goes.

    Cheers,

    Mark.

  12. Much like others have said, if it can be seen, I'll throw everything I can at it. In the past, if it's an area that can offer a lot of interest and detail with the interior portions, but visible through a small window, I'd put lights in, or open up an extra hatch to get into there. Otherwise, no, if it can't be seen, it's not bothered with.

    Cheers,

    Mark.

×
×
  • Create New...