Great additions to the interior.
Jakko’s 1:35 Dragon Sd.Kfz. 251
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Guest
This kit is not endearing itself to me.
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That is the floor with the seat frames installed, but no seats yet because I want to paint underneath first. I cleaned up and glued those frames in place yesterday, and when I went on today, I discovered something rather important that the instructions make not clear at all:
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Yes, for the wooden slat seats, you don’t need those frames at all … but that’s not how it looks from the drawings. They give me the impression that the wooden seats go on top of the frames just like the leather ones did.
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So I duly cut them off again, and cleaned up the area after taking that photo. The instructions make another mistake about the wooden seats, namely that they show parts B12 and B13 without their legs, which go into the holes in the lockers under the seats. I had to trim down those legs, except the ones on the corners, because the other frames had filled the holes for them.
Also, those same parts don’t sit completely underneath the seats: instead, the seats sit inside the L-shape you can see in the top half of the wooden seats drawing. If you do glue B12/B13 fully under the seats, the rears will sit far too high and the inboard sides will be outboard of the locker edge — guess how I discovered all of this.
Those little parts also all come with a ton of ejector pin nodules that you have to remove, so these seats, of either type, are not a quick job at all. But this is them in place:
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Still loose, because like I said, I want to paint underneath first.
Oh, yeah, and I filled the holes for the driver’s gas mask container on the left side of the firewall, as I doubt the French would have kept that in.Comment
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Guest
I thought much the same, and it’s always an encouraging sight when the model actually begins to resemble the real thing.
Just trying to make it somewhat believable
Every time I get to deal with tracks that have issues like these, I just think to myself: at least they’re not Crab flail chainsComment
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Guest
I think I’m lucky to have escaped those so far
Though I’ll dispute the great painting skills — there are plenty of people on here who are far better painters (and builders) than I am.
The cooling air exhaust louvres on the sides of the bonnet had me wondering how best to make them, not to mention what their sizes were. I began with the two known (to me, anyway) pictures of this vehicle, the one I already posted:
and one of even greater quality:
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and then scratchbuilt the louvres:
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I opened the pictures of the real vehicle in Photoshop and used its measuring tool to get the length of the bonnet along its side edge as well as how far the front and rear of each exhaust louvre were from the front edge of the bonnet, and also did the same for the antenna mounting. That produced these dimensions:
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Each of the louvres is 5 mm × 5 mm large, the front two are 1 mm thick while the rear two are 1.5 mm, because it looks to me like the rear ones are slightly bigger in the photos. I made them wedge-shaped by taking a piece of plastic card of the right thickness, mark out a line 5 mm from the edge and then file an angle from the edge of the card to the line. Once that was done, I could cut out this wedge-shaped strip and chop it into 5 mm lengths. Then I rounded off the edges and glued the louvres to the model, with the filed side down — because I think the rear edge is at 90° to the outside, not to the armour plate.Comment
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Guest
It’s just practice, really
One of the last hurdles to tackle is the drive sprockets, which I’ve said before are missing the rollers and those rollers are in the wrong position. Looking more closely at pictures of the real thing, though, I came to the conclusion that it’s not the rollers that are placed wrong, but the flats on the rubber tyres. On the real thing, the positions of the rollers correspond to the spokes on the outer wheel half, and the model has it like that too. This must mean that the flats should be “advanced” around the rim a little …
That, though, seems almost impossible to do well, so I decided on another approach: file down the tyres to represent a worn one where the angles are mostly gone, and it’s nowhere near as obvious that the flats are in the wrong place.
While doing that, I also removed the teeth from the rear half of the wheel, then glued the halves together and started making the rollers. For that, I used 1.3 mm plastic rod, first cutting one to length by eye and adjusting it until it was the right size, and then making the other 27 to that length with my chopper tool.
However, they proved difficult to put in between the two halves, so after about five I pried them apart again (the glue was still soft) and stuck the rollers directly to the teeth I left on the front half instead. Here are the two front halves, one with and one without rollers:
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And complete with the back halves on too:
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Guest
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Guest
I’m starting to agree with Guest about those tracks …
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After finally cleaning up all the links, I started to assemble them into tracks. This entails hooking two links together and glueing a block over them to trap the pins and make the two links hinge. Unfortunately, due to the small size of about 8 by 5.5 mm for a link and 5 by 2.5 mm for a block (and probably my finger joints being stiffer than I would like), this is very hard to do. The blocks are difficult to pick up because of their size and shape, also difficult to put into position, especially with glue on, and it’s all too easy to get glue into the hinge by accident.
You can see a length of six links in the photo. That was made in two goes because both times, I got sick of it after three links … and I managed to glue one block to the next both times, so it only articulates in three places rather than five as it should.
After giving it some though, I tried hooking two links together with the block already in place, but that snaps off one of the pins so it’s not really a good method for making a working track, I think. Still, I’ve decided to glue the blocks to the links first and then see about adding them together. This is easier because you don’t have to handle a block and a length of track: put a block on your work surface, inside up, put glue on it and push a link down onto it. I’ll either try hooking the links together like I said, or I’ll stick most of the wheels onto the model and glue the tracks to them before painting, because articulation is irrelevant then.
My advice: buy another brand.Comment
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I made some of this type up a few years ago for a 250. Hated them….far too fragile. Gave them an enamel wash to dirty them up and watched them fall apart again….at that point I took the second option below after the question…..
Question Jakko….do you really need them to articulate? If you do, then carry on :thumb2:
If not, then glue them together into link and length units and add the blocks afterwards…..it’s quite easy to make them removable when assembled.Comment
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