Hasegawa’s IJN Battleship “Mutsu” 1:350 w/ full option PE/brass upgrade kits - by “Niphon”:
There are 30 more images in my latest page:
http://www.falconbbs.com/model56c.htm
Have fun!
Hasegawa’s IJN Battleship “Mutsu” 1:350 w/ full option PE/brass upgrade kits - by “Niphon”:
There are 30 more images in my latest page:
http://www.falconbbs.com/model56c.htm
Have fun!
Not bad, i.e. good :-).
But 2 things:
rigging with rugged thread is not best possibility (you can use e.g. black or dark grey colored fine fishing line;
it seems, that grey colored plastic is’nt painted at all - and it looks like plastic.
But anyway, looks good.
Looks like a very good clean build. I would have used a nylon smoke thread in .003 or .004 intead of the fuzzy one used for the rigging. The nylon thread looks like steel cable in that scale. Also a nice wood base will add even more to the build. Don’t know if its the angle or even if it’s supposed to be there, but it looks like a large gap where the superstructure meets the deck on the 4th picture.
Great effort. The PE application is very tidy. Other than those already mentioned by the previous posts, the ensigns are not quite correct. It’s either at the bow, or the stern (and probably not that particular one at stern), or at the mast.
Overall, nice job. However, I have used Testor’s putty to fill the CAD lines that Hasegawa left on the hull. Testor’s has a relatively fine tip on the tube, making it a neater job to fill those lines. I remember someone once mentioned using whiteout with good effect in an earlier thread.
Bill Morrison
Thanks so much for all kind responses and suggestions! I really appreciate them!
Wojszwillo,
Agree. I think “Niphon” is not familiar with the fine fishing line. I don’t know whether it’s available locally.
You should look closely. It was not only painted but also weathered!
plastickjunkie, one reason the threads look fuzzy is the time it took to build this one and this one alone - from 1 Apr 2009 to 31 Oct 2010. That’s a year and seven months straight. Dust had so much time building up on them. Between the .003 or .004 nylon and finest copper wire (I don’t know its diameter but it’s very fine), what do you think is a better choice?
A wooden base may be better, but it costs some bucks and the provided base will not be used. And that’s a waste! I see no gap in the 4th picture.
potchip, I’ll have to look for the meaning of ‘ensigns’ to know what part you mean.
warshipguy, I see nothing wrong with those lines. They represent seams between iron plates, don’t they? Tamiya’s Yamato 1:350 doesn’t come with these lines, I remember my other modeler scribed them up which is above and beyond the call of duty.
Truly a piece of art,beautiful build,thanks for posting.
gap at base of forward superstructure near the back. those engraved lines on the hull are not hull plates but a screwup when converting to cnc machining. ships like houses are not built like that as there is no cohension\strength which is why they are always staggered.
Great build, and I know what you mean about time to build. I’ve been working on the same ship for 6 months now. As far as the hull goes, most of the best builds I have seen have lessened the “excel spreadsheet” look with putty. But that is not to say the plates did not stand out. And the rigging on this, is one of the most daunting I have ever seen for a battleship.
Take a look at this site for a close up view of the Nagato. The plates on many of the IJN ships were more pronounced than some of the others navies.
http://www.tt-fleet.com/smf/index.php?page=42#Nagato
Nice Job, now I can’t wait to start on my Nagato![Y]
[quote user=“Model Maniac”]
Between the .003 or .004 nylon and finest copper wire (I don’t know its diameter but it’s very fine), what do you think is a better choice?
A wooden base may be better, but it costs some bucks and the provided base will not be used. And that’s a waste! I see no gap in the 4th picture.
I’d go with the .003 nylon thread. Very easy to work with and attach with CA. Wood bases are inexpensive. Just need a couple of brass or wood finials as attachment points and some stain for the wood.
Again, looks very nice.
“Ensigns” is another word for flags. The cad lines are really an unfortunate accident but they shouldn’t be made worse by being made more pronounced by having a wash applied to them. The searchlights need lenses.
This is an excellently done piece. My compliments to the builder, he couldn’t have known about those cad lines on the hull that were not supposed to be there.
anthony2779 - Many thanks for your kind compliments!
ddp59 - I still don’t get it about the gap. Can you locate it in the picture? As for those engraved lines, ‘subfixzer’ has suggested that the builder “couldn’t have known about those cad lines on the hull that were not supposed to be there”, and that’s the case.
sumter III - Thanks so much for your kind words! You’ve been building this one for 6 months?, how many more months do you think it will take? I have seen your pictures of the real Nagato, I think it’s OK not to do anything with those CAD lines because the real ship seems to have that same lines. But why will you build both the Mutsu and the Nagato when they’re in the same class? Wouldn’t it be better to divert your resource to building other ship such as Akagi?
plastickjunkie - Many thanks for your answer. I believe you and I’ve already asked my brother to buy .003 & .004 nylon wires for me from shops near his office. Using a wooden base and brass or wood finials means that you’ll have to drill two big holes under the hull, right? That may not be easy job, and I think the ship is more secured sitting on its own base - the one provided in the box - than on two poles (your finials).
Thanks again then!
subfixer - Thanks for the meaning of “ensigns”. So the flags are at the wrong places? I don’t know whether the instruction sheets suggest the points to put the flags or not. But I think it should, and the builder has followed the instructions. As for those CAD lines, I saw the real ship in the same class and it also has them. So I think there’s no problem with them.
Thank you very much for your kind compliments on the build. You’re right that “Niphon” couldn’t have known about those CAD lines. I didn’t know either!
The next three ships that I’ll show in a row will be
Academy’s Admiral Graf Spee 1:350 (Premium Edition) (#1)
AFV Club’s U-Boat type VIIB + Voyager’s PE Upgrade Set 1:350 (#1)
Revell’s U-Boat type VIIC 1:350 (#1)
(#1 means 1 of 2 - I bought these three ships two each, crazy?)
They’re being built by another modeler named “Toom”. I hope he’ll deliver them this month or next.
NICE build Maniac. We can see the time and patience invested in this project and you should be justifiably proud. I myself am in the midst of a rebuild of 1/350 Tamiya Yamato with the new LionRoar set (unbelievable how many parts in that upgrade, sheesh) and the time required for completion can be rather daunting.
I have the Hasegawa Nagato up next on the bench (also with the associated LionRoar set) and so found your post and pics very interesting and timely.
Well done.
Actually, those lines engraved into the hull moldings do not represent hull platings; they are the CAD lines used by the kit’s design team to design the parts. The lines should have been erased from the design. As a result, they are molded into the hull parts in error by Hasegawa. They should be filled in.
Bill Morrison
Should be an easy fix with a little putty…
Black color fishing line:
http://www.mikado.pl/catalog/zylki_i_plecionki/zylki/feeder/
She is 0,2 mm tick i.e. 0,0079’’
There are and 0,06 mm tick fishing lines, i.e. 0,0024’’
I saw weathering, but have tought that grey plastic is leaved without painting.
Sorry, if I was mistaken.
You saw the other ship in the class? That is pretty amazing, I didn’t know you were a diver. The other ship in the class with Mutsu was Nagato which was sunk by an atomic bomb test in Bikini Atoll.
You certainly didn’t see those lines on the ‘real ship in the same class’. Wartime photos of both Nagato and Mutsu are pretty clear - those lines are not there.
It’s a nice build, but don’t try to blow sunshine up our skirts - and why should you, it isn’t your builders issue, per se, it was Hasagawa that screwed this up…
Is it me or did the BS alarm just go off
So loud, it made my ears bleed…[8o|]