February 11, 2009 in
Hobby. .
February 10, 2009 in
Hobby. .
I caved and got the Kotobukiya 1/72 HMM Saber Tiger ‘Schwaltz Custom’ yesterday. Should be in my grubby hands real soon.
The HMM series of Zoids take the phrase ‘over-engineered’ to the max. This one won’t be different as it easily tops 500 parts. Just assembling it alone will take me a couple of evenings.
But man… it’s just… so… pretty…

Kit Info
Manufacturer: Hasegawa
Scale: 1/72
Media: Injection Plastic
So with the suspension of the ‘VF-213 Black Lions’ project, I decided to salvage the good parts from there and use it on this new one. VF-101 is the primary training unit for the F-14 community. During its operational lifetime it fielded all variants of the Tomcat, with this particular F-14D being flown in this particular marking in 2004.
Anyway, the fitting of the Hasegawa F-14 is notoriously fiddly so I went really slow for this one since I really didn’t do a good job on the previous one. First up though, the cockpit. This is very carefully handpainted with Vallejo Model Color and drybrushed with light grey to bring up the details. I didn’t go all out on the details because I’ll be modeling the canopy closed, so most of the details will be obscured.

The F-14 kit is notorious for bad fitting of the front and rear fuselage. And this was the best I coud do. There’s a step on the topside which is quite obvious on bare plastic. Hopefully preshading will reduce the effect. The bottom though, is quite bad. Though mitigated by the fact that I will be covering most of the unsightly gap with the Phoenix missile pallets. This is something to look out for in my next F-14 build for sure.

The misfitting cockpit tub necessitates that I try to fix some misalignment within the fron landing gear bay. I basically used a screwdriver to force a re-alignment of the bay.

The D variant had the wing gloves totally removed so I had to cover these up. Instead of using the kit part then puttying, I decided to slot in 0.5mm thick plastic sheet instead. Less filling to be done later.
One detail Hasegawa failed to add to the kit is the GPS dome on the spine. This is a late modfication though and wouldn’t have been there when this mold first popped up in the market. I tested using a small H-eye from Wave. Size-wise it looks right though it might be a bit on the thick side.

February 4, 2009 in
Hobby. .
So one of my favorite GM variants, the GM Sniper II, has been announced by Bandai for release in late February. Turns out, its subsidiary B-Club is releasing the kit. In resin form. As a conversion to the existing GM Command kit.
Damn you Bandai! Why???!!! And check out the price on this thing! 9,800 yen! Because of course, it’s resin…
%^&!@^@*!^*&!^#…