Saturday, March 28, 2015

Recycled Card Press Out Model

A friend gave me this fun little model that he picked up while travelling in the mainland.  

It is a Japanese card press out model of a car made of recycled paper.


Here are all of the pieces.  Complete with instructions.  


The instructions...  Basically the interlocking pieces are numbered.  The pieces are put together in numerical order.  You look for the two numbers that are the same and connect them together.


This bunny rabbit piece will eventually be a seat.  Notice the numbers on the pieces.


The sides are up!


Floorpan in.  Seats in.  Wheels in.  


And here is the completed car.  





Saturday, March 14, 2015

My First Gundam

So for my first attempt at a Gundam model, I decided to try the RX-78-2 Master Grade.  From what I read online, this was the first model kit created by Bandai in the Master Grade level.  



Initially, I was thinking of doing a step by step walkthrough of building this model but I quickly saw that Gundam Models are more involved and complex than most automotive plastic models. 



Also, the instructions are in nihonjin.


So I opened the box, turned past the introduction information which (since my Japanese reading skills are horrible) I assumed were specs and history about the Gundam mecha, and started building.

One thing I noticed right away was the thought it took to develop this model is amazing.  Pretty much all the pieces have a purpose to them and they all have nice detail to them.  There was no glue required with any of these pieces too.

After about one hour of work, this is what I had.  I hadn't made any sort of plastic model in years so I had almost no tools.  I used a pair of scissors and my trusty Leatherman Wingman multitool.  Thats why some of the tabs are still showing.  

About three hours later I had a body and a head.  Notice the instructions behind the model.  If you build these for the first time, note that the parts frames are all lettered and numbered.  When you are building, the instructions will point to which frames you will need for each body part.  It also tells you which part is needed per section (ie:  A1 will mean stalk A, part number 1).


A few more hours of work and I had completed the Gundam's feet.  notice the parts stalk at the top of the picture.


The completed model.  The model came with multiple weapons as well.  

The whole process took about 6-7 hours.  If I had better tools, I am sure it would have come out better but it was more about the experience for me as this was my first attempt at a Gundam model.  I was surprised at how good the articulation in the moving parts were.  The detail is awesome as well.  In the end, you have what looks like a store bought toy created in a manufacturing plant.  

Normally I collect models and I do not open them.  In fact, I'm staring at an ae86 Corolla model that I have not opened for years.  I am glad I built this though.