Hi from Anchorage

AKRoast

New Member
Joined
Oct 14, 2024
Messages
5
Back into scale modeling after last doing it 40+ years ago as a pre-teen. Trying to improve on that quality ;-)
first kit was a Hobby Boss F/A-18 Super Hornet, then a Tamiya Tiger I-Late Model, then an Academy A-10C, then an Italeri HC.2/CH-47F Chinook, now working on a Tamiya Leopard II.
Here in Anchorage we have only one true hobby store (plus Michaels, which of course sucks) and Amazon. Amazon doesnt ship any flammable things to Alaska because it is all air. Many other Lower-48 online hobby stores either do not ship to Alaska, or charge more for shipping than a item costs. The local hobby store only gets a few large haz mat shipments a year, with all their paints, glue, etc, so selection is limited.
I was trying Vallejo acrylics but have not been impressed, have been Tamiya acrylics more now, and Testors enamel for some hand painted details. Air brushing skills are improving, got a spray booth now also.
I am attaching a few photos of my builds thus far.
Notes:

The A-10 kit said to add weight in a little compartment next to nose gear well, which I did in the form of several steel nuts superglued in, but it was not enough I found out way too late. Could not get enough additional weight in nose gear well without messing finished model. After these photos I added a little post to the back made out of clear plastic sprue to hold up the tail, which looks pretty good. I also lost the all-important 30mm gun muzzle, and had to recreate one with bit of plastic tank gun barrel left over and drilling a bunch of little holes. It is too big, but looks ok if you don't know that.

The Super Hornet I thought I built cockpit well just right, but the rear ejection seat ended up being too high somehow, so it is an "open canopy" version now. I wanted it to be closed canopy. It had more joint gaps also than the other kits.

The Chinook went ok, I was done weathering, had some issues with the enamel wash thinner eating thru the acyrlic gloss coat and softening the arcylic paint under it. Also was going to matte coat rattle can it as final step and picked up grey primer rattle can and started spraying it before I realized what I was doing. So had to try and fix that , so it became a very "dirty" version.

The Tiger tank I made up the angular camo which turned out pretty good. Still havent tried the typical curvy camo jobs, am on the Leopard II I am working on now though. All the poster putty, silly putty, etc mentioned in modeling guides does not seem to work, are impossible to get tight over and around details, leaves a residue, etc. The individual links on the Tiger tracks were a pain. They pressed together without anything mechanically joining them, ended up a super-glued mess but looked ok after paint and weathering.

Clear plastic parts, and the really tiny parts and decals, are my sore points thus far.
Thanks for this forum as a resource!

A10-pic 1.jpg

A-10-pic 2.jpg

A10-pic 3.jpg

Chinook pic 1.jpg

Chinook pic 2.jpg

FA-18-pic1.jpg

Tiger - pic 1.jpg

Tiger - pic 2.jpg
 
Sorry if I double posted my introduction. I wrote one this morning and thought I had posted it, but it was not showing in "my posts", then I posted this one, and saw the old one in the list of newest posts. Cannot find a way to delete one of them.
 
Welcome! I especially like your A-10.

Regarding the A-10 nose-up issue: You could go to a reloading supply locally to you, or ask a neighbor for some leftovers, and get some small #6 or #8 shotgun pellets. Reloaders use them. Empty the tea from a teabag and hang in from the nose of your A-10 model with it's string and add the lead pellets into the teabag to see how much you need. Drill a hole in the front landing gear bay just a little bigger than the pellet size. Stand the model on it's nose and slip in the lead pellets followed by (or pre-mixed with) an epoxy through a syringe. Keep an eye on epoxy seep through the seems in the kit and wipe it off if it oozes out. You may have to do paint touch up.
Let it sit an hour, or a few days, depending on the epoxies drying time, and patch the hole with putty and touch up the paint if you think someone will look into the landing gear bay. Or if it makes you feel better.

Did this decades ago for radio control models.

Be well. Model on. And again, Welcome to the forum!

Eric
 
How do you do!
Keep the posts coming! Nice work all round.

I just got active on here a month ago, and pretty much every other new guy has a story like yours about the return to the hobby.

Can't wait to see your Leopard II, we love to watch work in progress!

Cheers
 
Nice job and welcome to the forums! I can only imagine the frustration at not being able to get the things you need, but it looks like your making it work! And don't worry about the duplicate intro posts... Pfffft...

At least your not like that one new guy that recently had like 4 of them all at the same time... That was super awkward....

Awkward Season 4 GIF by The Office
 

Latest posts

Back
Top