Matchbox 1:72 Dornier Skyservant

Matchbox 1:72 Dornier Skyservant

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dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,163 posts

184 months

Wednesday 11th March 2015
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telecat said:
Certainly doing a better job than I used to do. Always enjoyed making them but rarely painted them up and certainly never filled and sanded. On reason I liked the Matchbox kits was the Colour on the kit.
Back in the day, Matchbox kits got a lot of criticism for the multi-coloured plastic. No idea why - kids who just wanted to put a kit together without paint (maybe like you) got a less boring result, and the more serious modellers would paint them anyway. I don't see any downsides TBH.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,163 posts

184 months

Wednesday 11th March 2015
quotequote all
First top camo colour on tonight:





He didn't need much help with that. A few missed bits and splodges on the undersides by mistake, but it'll be OK.

Dr Jekyll

23,820 posts

261 months

Wednesday 11th March 2015
quotequote all
dr_gn said:
Back in the day, Matchbox kits got a lot of criticism for the multi-coloured plastic. No idea why - kids who just wanted to put a kit together without paint (maybe like you) got a less boring result, and the more serious modellers would paint them anyway. I don't see any downsides TBH.
I remember trying to paint the green plastic of a Mig21 silver. Silver is always tricky to brush, but the green seemed almost impossible to cover. I gave up after about coat 7.

Mind you an Airfix F14 needed a lot of white paint, but was white plastic. It didn't occur to me to give it a grey undercoat so I ended up putting more white paint on bits that were already drying and turning it into a total mess.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,163 posts

184 months

Thursday 12th March 2015
quotequote all
Dr Jekyll said:
dr_gn said:
Back in the day, Matchbox kits got a lot of criticism for the multi-coloured plastic. No idea why - kids who just wanted to put a kit together without paint (maybe like you) got a less boring result, and the more serious modellers would paint them anyway. I don't see any downsides TBH.
I remember trying to paint the green plastic of a Mig21 silver. Silver is always tricky to brush, but the green seemed almost impossible to cover. I gave up after about coat 7.

Mind you an Airfix F14 needed a lot of white paint, but was white plastic. It didn't occur to me to give it a grey undercoat so I ended up putting more white paint on bits that were already drying and turning it into a total mess.
I've still got a drawer full of old Matchbox kits I built when I was a kid. I used Humbrol, Airfix or Revell enamels and never remembered having any issue with coverage. The colours still look OK even today, but the execution...maybe not so good.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,163 posts

184 months

Friday 13th March 2015
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Camo masking 90% done:





Needed a fag* to keep his hands steady after a hard day at school. Tut. Kids these days eh?







  • for the hard of thinking - it's a sherbet lolly.
Edited by dr_gn on Friday 13th March 22:21

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,163 posts

184 months

Saturday 14th March 2015
quotequote all
Green on. Of course I got the colours the wrong way around for him, but it's not the first time and won't be the last:



Not bad at all, a few bits of smudges beyond the masking, and some scratches with the tweezers when removing the tape, but hey, it's a first attempt:





Next steps are masking the black leading edge strips. Piece of cake after the camo.

sad61t

1,100 posts

210 months

Saturday 14th March 2015
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Not looking bad at all. Only concern is step 7, where the wheels are sandwiched between the spats, has been skipped and I'm not sure how he'll get them in now.

Don't worry about the smoking, by the time he's our age it'll be sugar that'll be banned, just like in 2000AD. What, you gave him a lolly?! Five years on Titan.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,163 posts

184 months

Saturday 14th March 2015
quotequote all
Wheels? We agreed that they'll be fixed, so I'll help him saw a radial slot from the centre to the edge. We can then paint them seperately and add them last for an easier painting job by pushing them into the spats via. the slot.


dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,163 posts

184 months

Wednesday 18th March 2015
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Mostly leading edge masking and painting tonight. Masking is not easy for him so far, I've had to help with initial positioning quite a bit, but he's still not complaining:





Current state of play:


perdu

4,884 posts

199 months

Wednesday 18th March 2015
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That is very neat work young N I am enjoying you sharing the model with us

nice one doc

AshVX220

5,929 posts

190 months

Thursday 19th March 2015
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Indeed, already it's far better than anything I did at the age of 14-15! Well done. smile

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,163 posts

184 months

Thursday 19th March 2015
quotequote all
Thanks, I'll let him know.

If I just gave him a kit, glue, paint and a file and let him get on with it, it probably wouldn't look like that, but still, all I'm trying to do is show him by example (e.g. filing a part or applying some pre-cut tape), then let him do the rest by himself.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,163 posts

184 months

Saturday 21st March 2015
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Few more new things tried today:

Drilling (for tailwheel)



Sawing (slots in the wheels)



Punching (masking tape for wheel centres)



Also detail painted the engines (which turned out very well considering it would have been easy to smudge the surrounds) and the spinners and tailwheel. I stuck the smaller bits to cocktail sticks for him, and blu-tacked the engine covers to the bench to stop them movnig around.





He also touched in some of the paint on the undersides



The wheels look great now fitted with PVA



Home straight now.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,163 posts

184 months

Monday 23rd March 2015
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Assembled and fixed the props and rudder (all with PVA on these smaller bits):



Also painted the flourescent bits - usual nightmare to apply, being translucent - took five coats:



Looks excellent:



Decals, doors and windows and a coat of varnish (not in that order) and that'll be it.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,163 posts

184 months

Wednesday 25th March 2015
quotequote all
Applied the 1974 vintage decals, which were OK after a percautionary coat of Klear. I painted more Klear onto the surface of the model just before he placed the decal. This bit was a team effort. I did assure him that with newer decals it would be easier:



Then, into the garage to spray it with matt varnish. He could operate the Humbrol nozzle OK; I helped him with the "wafting". There appeared to be something compulsive about spinning the props up with a hairdryer. I will have to remember that trick when it comes to taking some final photos:



I had my doubts about the fit of the windscreen, but it popped into place with no need for glue. Impressive fit:



Just the cabin windows and tailwheel and it's done. I may be biased, but I think it looks magnificent all things considered.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,163 posts

184 months

Friday 27th March 2015
quotequote all
So the windows, tailwheel and doors are in place - I thought it would be a real struggle to place the windows - I couldn't do it without tweezers, but the boy with better suited finger size made it look easy:





And that completes it:



















That's it folks - Thanks for watching!

Final word should go to the man himself:

I put loads of effort in the Skyservant. Finally I completed the Skyservant. It looks really good it looks super. The last thing I did were the very, very small windows- I also did the doors which were a bit bigger.




HoHoHo

14,987 posts

250 months

Friday 27th March 2015
quotequote all
11/10 without a doubt and you should both be very proud clap

My 5 year old has an interest and I hope he's as enthuesiastic and talented as your ickle lad yes

Look forward to the next model build wink

sad61t

1,100 posts

210 months

Friday 27th March 2015
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That looks great, the extra effort has been worth it. I hope he's enjoyed the build too.

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,163 posts

184 months

Friday 27th March 2015
quotequote all
HoHoHo said:
11/10 without a doubt and you should both be very proud clap

My 5 year old has an interest and I hope he's as enthuesiastic and talented as your ickle lad yes

Look forward to the next model build wink
Thanks very much! We had a blast building this. I'd recommend one of these old Matchbox kits for a beginner any day - very simple construction, no superflous detail. This one cost just £3.

Frankly I'm amazed at how good it looks, despite having virtually no surface detail and some pretty crude bits and pieces. Obviously the painting is nowhere near airbrush standard, with streaks and brushmarks all over it, but a coat of Humbrol #49 matt made an unbelievable difference. It worked particularly well on the flourescent orange bits. Filling any gaps with water soluble Milliput was both fun for the boy, and very effective at refining the joins.

If your 5 y/o likes building - go for it, and just let him paint it and build it how he wants. That's what I did on his first couple of models, then he started asking about camoflauge and how masking tape worked...



HoHoHo

14,987 posts

250 months

Friday 27th March 2015
quotequote all
dr_gn said:
HoHoHo said:
11/10 without a doubt and you should both be very proud clap

My 5 year old has an interest and I hope he's as enthuesiastic and talented as your ickle lad yes

Look forward to the next model build wink
Thanks very much! We had a blast building this. I'd recommend one of these old Matchbox kits for a beginner any day - very simple construction, no superflous detail. This one cost just £3.

Frankly I'm amazed at how good it looks, despite having virtually no surface detail and some pretty crude bits and pieces. Obviously the painting is nowhere near airbrush standard, with streaks and brushmarks all over it, but a coat of Humbrol #49 matt made an unbelievable difference. It worked particularly well on the flourescent orange bits. Filling any gaps with water soluble Milliput was both fun for the boy, and very effective at refining the joins.

If your 5 y/o likes building - go for it, and just let him paint it and build it how he wants. That's what I did on his first couple of models, then he started asking about camoflauge and how masking tape worked...
That sounds like a plan - albeit I'll have to finish the tree house first.......



That's this weekend so maybe over Easter whistle