Category Archives: Modeling

Viper: Pilot and Inital Assembly

A few photos before I take a break.  It’s time for the yearly Altered Fluid Writer’s Retreat, so I’ll be sequestered in a house in Connecticut for the next 5 days with nothing to do but write.

The pilot in the kit is a decently cast resin figure.  There’s a little clean-up needed, but no major mold lines, so it didn’t take long to prep the piece.  The flight suits in Battlestar are this funky metallic green color, for which there exists no store-bought match.  I pulled out a few bottles of Vallejo acrylic that I thought looked close, and started mixing on my test pallet.  Six tries later I had a good result (and only 5 failed attempts is pretty good).

The colors:
Russian Green (894), 3 parts
Medium Olive (850), 2 parts
Bronze (998), 2 parts

It looks great in person, very close to the on-screen appearance, but in the photos the metallic doesn’t show up very well.  Further work needs to be done on the figure, such as shading and highlighting, applying the flight patch decals, dullcoating, and hopefully I can find some way to replicate the insignia on the top of the helmet.

As I continue to work on the pilot, I started major assembly.  Fuselage halves are glued together, with the cockpit sandwiched inside.  In order to avoid problems with seams, I started at the nose and worked back, gluing and clamping, waiting, then moving further back.  The fuselage just forward of the cockpit was an odd angle that wouldn’t accept clamps, so I glued it and watched The Colbert Report while I held the pieces together.

One new detail in the cockpit are the oxygen hoses at the rear of the seat.  Made from old guitar string.

Viper: Cockpit, Pt. 2

With the wind ripping out of the west today so hard that I’m not sure how parts of our building haven’t sailed off into the Hudson, there was no way I could set up the airbrush booth to do any spray painting.  So, I’ll take the chance to update the blog.

The finishing touches of the cockpit are the decals.  The dials are tiny, minuscule, and any other word you can think of that means “Holy crap, how am I supposed to work with that?”  I used a micro punch set to punch out the round dial faces from the sheet.  Much easier to get them to sit where they should on the instrument panel without excess carrier film to worry about.  The finished cockpit shot shows everything decaled, flat-coated, weathered (minimal), and the instrument and display faces gloss-coated to give it that under-glass look.  I have not yet attached the cockpit sidewalls, as I want some wiggle and adjustment room when it comes time to put the assembly in the fuselage.

The other photo is of the fuselage, port side.  A coat of primer has been shot, and mostly sanded away.  Evident in the photo is the rough, sandy texture of the plastic, and heavy scratches under the cockpit.  I’ve spoken with others who have built this kit and they all report the texture all over, and those scratches in the exact same location.  It looks like polishing the molds wasn’t a high priority before the kit was put into production.

Up next: Pilot figure and starting fuselage assembly.

Viper: Cockpit

Since the cockpit gets sealed up inside the fuselage, I have to deal with it first.  The photos below show the process.  The five major components (2 sidewalls, tub with seat, instrument panel, and display) were cut out, cleaned up, and primed.  The sidewalls had HUGE ejector pin marks in prominent positions, so I filled and sanded, primed, repeated as necessary.  I then cut in and painted the black panels by hand, something I don’t normally do, but they were just too tiny to mask.

After that, I began to mask off the seat and the top of the instrument panel, both also to be in black.  The seat was tricky, and I wish it had been a separate assembly to ease the process, but you work with what you have. I started by “cutting in” the seat with extremely small 1mm tape.  Once that was completed I went around again using 5mm wide Tamiya masking tape and blue painters tape.  Once that was all set and the lines were clean where I needed them, everything else was covered with Silly Putty, and the paint sprayed.  The last two photos show the paint and masks after spraying, and then after all masking removed.

Time to mask the seat: 1 hours, 20 minutes.
Time to paint the seat: 2 minutes.
Time to remove all the masking: less than 2 minutes.

Colonial Viper MKII

I’ve been contracted to build a model of the Colonial Viper MKII, from the new Battlestar Galactica series.  I’m using the recent release of the Moebius  Models kit, 1/32nd scale in plastic.

Below are some photos of the kit parts, decals, a sample page from the instructions, etc.

My goal is to have this build completed by the first weekend in April, so that I can enter it in our yearly MosquitoCon contest, and then ship it to the client the following week.  Quite a goal, considering how slowly I generally build, but my lack of employment at the moment should allow me to meet my deadline.  I’ve already started construction on the cockpit, photos will be in the next post.

USS Weehawken… again…

The website Model Warships — a sight I spend WAY too much time reading — has uploaded some photos of my USS Weehawken build.  Nothing much different than what is already here on my Model Making page, but it’s good to get some extra press.

For the Modelwarships.com article, click HERE.

Cylon Raider

Here’s one that I have had done for some time, but just now got around to uploading the photos.

Cylon Raider fighter from the new Battlestar Galactica.  Not the hardest kit I’ve ever built by a long shot, but it did have its issues.

Click HERE for the full story.

Pfalz D.IIIa Model

With the several model completions I’ve posted recently and with at least one more to come shortly, it might appear as if I’m turning these things out at an amazing pace.  In reality all I’m doing is finishing a bunch of projects I nearly completed in the past, lost interest in, and am now revisiting so I can clear the bench for a new project.

Here’s another WWI biplane.  Love those pretty colors!  For the final photos, click HERE.

ME-262 Fighter

Here’s another of my recent completions.  This was a quick build as it’s actually a snap-together kit that I built for a group project.  I’m not a fan of Luftwaffe aircraft, but this was a fun build and I learned a few things.  Click on the HERE for more photos and comments on the build.

One thing that I’ve realized by doing two website updates in the past week is that I need to migrate my personal site to Dreamweaver.  I’ve moved all of my client’s websites to Dreamweaver or templates over the past two years, but I’ve never taken the time to do my personal one.  The old FrontPage application and the convoluted upload procedure I have to go through takes any fun out of the process, and while the migration to Dreamweaver won’t be quick and easy, it’s definitely time to do it.

U.S.S. Essex, 1864

Here’s a quick little project I completed late last week.  I needed something to put on the table at our yearly MosquitoCon model show, so that I didn’t feel like a total loser.  I put this together in about two weeks of semi-intense work (intense model work for me means that I spend more than an hour a day at it).  I’m pleased with how she came out.  Photos and build article are HERE.