Major differences between resin and styrene
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Major differences between resin and styrene
I looked through the pinned posts but I couldn't find what I was looking for.
What are the pros and cons of resin models versus styrene? I've only ever worked with styrene so that's what I'm familiar with. I'm thinking about ordering some resin models from StarCraft.
What pieces of advice would you give a beginner in resin like me? Construction, painting, etc?
What are the pros and cons of resin models versus styrene? I've only ever worked with styrene so that's what I'm familiar with. I'm thinking about ordering some resin models from StarCraft.
What pieces of advice would you give a beginner in resin like me? Construction, painting, etc?
Pinning??Kylwell wrote:Resin requires pinning and different glues. Cleanup is usually different as resin can have huge pour stubs, horrible seams, misaligned sides, etc.
When it comes to paint the biggest difference is resin pretty much mandates a primer.
I thought we had something on resin here...
Normal?? What is normal??
I would also add that resin almost always seems to be rougher on the sculpt, so if you want a flawless model it can take more work. But that can also be the fun part. I have seen a few near-perfect resin models. And of course there are plenty of bad styrene kits.
Not much else that hasn't been said though. As long as you don't get a weepy, saggy piece of resin it's truly just another kit.
-Rog
Not much else that hasn't been said though. As long as you don't get a weepy, saggy piece of resin it's truly just another kit.
-Rog
- Richard Baker
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A lot depends on who produces the kit. I have some which require a lot of work to get the pieces to fit well, others (like Atomic City/Captain Cardboard) look like styrene kits just from a different material.
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Things go wrong and bad things happen- that is just the way the world is-
It is how you deal with it that tells the world who you truly are.
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... and companies like Volks is taking resin in a novel direction with lineup like the Charagumin figures:
http://www.volks.co.jp/en/charagumin/whats.html/
http://www.volks.co.jp/en/charagumin/whats.html/
Naoto Kimura
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- Lt. Z0mBe
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Check out this thread and I think you'll have all the information you need:
http://www.starshipmodeler.net/talk/vie ... hp?t=34290
Kenny
http://www.starshipmodeler.net/talk/vie ... hp?t=34290
Kenny
Thanks! That had a little bit more information than this thread.Lt. Z0mBe wrote:Check out this thread and I think you'll have all the information you need:
http://www.starshipmodeler.net/talk/vie ... hp?t=34290
Kenny
Emphatically this. Be aware of or research the quality of the products of the maker. A pour mix on a two part resin product will give you no end of trouble in building and finishing it. Try to get / find images of the kit parts before you buy.Richard Baker wrote:A lot depends on who produces the kit. I have some which require a lot of work to get the pieces to fit well, others (like Atomic City/Captain Cardboard) look like styrene kits just from a different material.
Other than that, not much different. In some ways better and more messy.
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