Made a start on this today in between the slow & steady weathering process on my T-28. I'm sure you've seen plenty of these being built so I won't go into too much detail but I thought I'd start a thread anyway as I'm sure I'll have some questions along the way.
Lots of different pieces to the fighting compartment coming together at all sorts of angles and some that have to be bent to shape, so rather than go step by step and get alignment wrong, I cleaned up all of the pieces and put it together in one go. First "tacking" each panel in place with a few drops of Contacta to give me some wiggle room, then when it was all assembled I ran TET down the inside of each joint, pressing them firmly together.
Seemed to work OK as it all lines up and I have minimal gaps.
It's been a speedy process so far and after only a couple of hours I had something resembling the main body of a tank
I used a bit of Vallejo putty in some of the joints. I know these are just large plates riveted together so the fit will never be seamless, but I'm sure they didn't have gaps that let daylight through! By using the Vallejo one I could get it into the seam and clean off the surrounding area with a cotton bud before it dried. Sanding around all of those rivets wasn't an option.
I've left the guns out for now as I'm sure I'll just knock them off.
I'm already having a debate with myself about the paint job. I know these are generally just a greeny browny muddy colour, but I'm fancying a camo job. I know it won't please the purists but I could mark it down as "experimental" :smiling5:
Lots of different pieces to the fighting compartment coming together at all sorts of angles and some that have to be bent to shape, so rather than go step by step and get alignment wrong, I cleaned up all of the pieces and put it together in one go. First "tacking" each panel in place with a few drops of Contacta to give me some wiggle room, then when it was all assembled I ran TET down the inside of each joint, pressing them firmly together.
Seemed to work OK as it all lines up and I have minimal gaps.
It's been a speedy process so far and after only a couple of hours I had something resembling the main body of a tank
I used a bit of Vallejo putty in some of the joints. I know these are just large plates riveted together so the fit will never be seamless, but I'm sure they didn't have gaps that let daylight through! By using the Vallejo one I could get it into the seam and clean off the surrounding area with a cotton bud before it dried. Sanding around all of those rivets wasn't an option.
I've left the guns out for now as I'm sure I'll just knock them off.
I'm already having a debate with myself about the paint job. I know these are generally just a greeny browny muddy colour, but I'm fancying a camo job. I know it won't please the purists but I could mark it down as "experimental" :smiling5:
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