Hi Gedmac - thanks for the tip! I'll take a look at Masking Frisk. As you say, it's the fact the surfaces are not flat which may be a problem, but I'll fall over that bridge when I come to it.
For now I've been working on just building the large parts of the exterior shell and skipping over insets, plants and electronic bits. I'm kind of hoping that this way I can get the main paint job done (and save paint) and I can do the insets together as a set which will help with consistency.
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Fantasy
Professional modeller: You have built a model before. Your model is made 'Desert Fashion'. Who told you how to do that?
Me: No one. It seemed the proper way.
Professional modeller: That it is. (thinks) He shall know your ways as if born to them.
Reality
Professional modeller: Buffoon! You've just added 20 hours to your build.
Me: Eeep!
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I'm also turning my mind to making this a civilian ship - out go the guns and the big radar dish (which I've read is one of Han's 'special modifications'. I'll have to cobble some stuff together to replace them. I'm thinking of some sort of optical unit instead of the gun to help align the ship when it's used as a tug (this would also give the ventral and dorsal seating a function). Putting on big spindles of wire for pulling stuff (although how to stop it crashing into you when you stop?). Huge electro-magnets? I'm going to milliput the pre-made blast damage holes before I spray paint the shell.
I hope I am going in the right direction - I'm flying by the seat of my pants - but it is fun.
I also have to time my 'big builds' for when my wife is abroad on business trips, so I can take over the dining room table. I think I've got the timing right as I can do the insets while I'm waiting for her to go on her next business trip and then I can do the whole shell.
I've posted pictures of the four most useful tools in putting together the physical build: Sprue cutters from Citadel, a pair of reverse tweezers a molybdenum magnet to recharge the screwdriver which I got from Homebase - it's made by Phillips, I think, the set is called 'Kinchrome' and the one pictured (#0)has made it a breeze to do the screwing jobs. I found the one that was supplied by D'Agostini didn't quite have the grip I was looking for.
Question for you guys: Two of the tiny pins which hold the landing ramp in place fell out and by some miracle I found them. Is there a way to secure them more reliably?
Many thanks!
Ravs
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