I've just dug these models out of storage. I built them 1994 according to the date on the underside (anyone else date their models ?).
The main hull on each is made from plastic sheet. One is a Hover-Rover recon. vehicle and the other is a Saracen 2 Infantry Fighting Vehicle.
The backstory is they were built by Vickers Fighting Vehicles in response to the increasing vunerability of slow moving wheeled vehicles and low flying helicopters. They were then supplied to the Sultanate Of Oman. God knows what the fuel consumption of the IFV would be !
They are lightly weathered but this tends not to show in my photos.
http://s1211.photobucket.com/albums/cc440/modelpicsk/
Hover "tanks"
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Hover "tanks"
Never give in, never give in
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Winston S Churchill
never, never, never, never.
Winston S Churchill
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Ditto for me! Those builds a great! They look like something the army would use in the near future.
The understated weathering is pretty realistic. The US army (if that's the army these belong to, that is) wouldn't let their vehicles get too dirty if they could help it.
The understated weathering is pretty realistic. The US army (if that's the army these belong to, that is) wouldn't let their vehicles get too dirty if they could help it.
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Thanks for the positive comments. The skirts were made from oval section rigid plastic conduit which comes in approx 4' lengths.
The mesh screens are made from offcuts of dressmaking material. I think it's called "Vylene" and is used to back dresses. And it cost me nothing. It makes a great alternative to photoetched mesh.
The engines on the IFV are cocktail stick containers.
The mesh screens are made from offcuts of dressmaking material. I think it's called "Vylene" and is used to back dresses. And it cost me nothing. It makes a great alternative to photoetched mesh.
The engines on the IFV are cocktail stick containers.
Never give in, never give in
never, never, never, never.
Winston S Churchill
never, never, never, never.
Winston S Churchill
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You mean that grille material isn't photoetch?! I need to get me some. You think a dress shop would have scrap Vylene in the back room they'd let me have?
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It's Vilene (Vylene is a type of plastic) and this trick is a very old military modeller one. Look for "Wondaweb" in the haberdashery section of a department store and it costs cents.MillenniumFalsehood wrote:You mean that grille material isn't photoetch?! I need to get me some. You think a dress shop would have scrap Vylene in the back room they'd let me have?
"I'd just like to say that building large smooth-skinned models should be avoided at all costs. I now see why people want to stick kit-parts all over their designs as it covers up a lot of problems." - David Sisson