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Everything posted by Graham
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Actually, yes the YF-19 does have the option of exterior wing pylons and that's what those missiles on the TIAS cover are for. Missiles with Pylons - Hobby Base Retppu YF-19 Resin Kit Wing Missiles on Completed Hobby Base Retppu YF-19 (See small Fighter Mode Pic at bottom of page) As for the question of are they coming for the toy, well as usually my lips are sealed. Graham
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Who says the Fold Booster is a problem. There's no problem that I'm aware of. Graham AFAIK no, but I'll double check. Graham
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Which again, is the same as the Hasegawa kit. Graham
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So what's the difference between the D-Stance YF-21 shoulder and the SHE YF-21 shoulder? The SHE shoulder also featured a rotating mechanism to move the shoulder further back and expose the yellow color wing root section in fighter mode. See this pic: - SHE YF-21 Fighter Shoulder I've never seen a good pic of the D-Stance shoulder area in fighter mode. Graham
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David, you should know better than to make a statement like that. As someone who has owned both, I can say that original Yamato YF-19 is far from a direct copy of the SHE. There is more different between the two than there is the same. While it's true that SHE did provide technical assistence to Yamato and the transformation sequence is vaguely similar, the two are actually very different and certainly the Yamato is not a direct copy in terms of sculpt, features or transformation. Some of the many differences are: - 1) Yamato cockpit sculpt is a different and incorrect shape. 2) Yamato has front and rear landing gear, SHE has none. 3) Yamato has multiple locking tabs, SHE has none (or very few IIRC), using mainly screw tension for locking. 4) Yamato has the triangular gap where the nose hinges, SHE has no gap. 5) Yamato's gunpod attaches in fighter mode, SHE's doesn't. 6) Yamato's lower legs lack the intricate (and delicate) origami style folding panels of the SHE. 7) Yamato's overall sculpt is quite different, especially in the areas of the head, nose, chest, knees (in fact everywhere)! Many other differences, but as I don't have the SHE and Yamato in front of me, I can't list them, but you get the general idea. It's more accurate to say that Yamato's 1/72 YF-19 was loosly based on SHE's, in the same way that Spielberg's War of The Worlds movie was based on the orginal H.G. Wells novel. Graham
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I'd have concerns whether a rotating, collapsable landing gear strut would be durable enough. The top part of the strut that the lower part collapses into would have awfully thin walls on a 1/60 scale toy. Graham
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Bah, my 3 production VF-0S all have no problem holding a pose like that. Only my loosy-goosy preproduction sample can't. Graham
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It will have the shoulder flaps. Maybe they are just folded up in that pic. Graham
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I've got a beautiful pic of the underside, just can't show it. Graham
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Actually, I always thought that Yamato should release a Cannon Fodder VF-0A first and then save the Shin VF-0A until the Ghost Booster is ready and then release it as a set. That's the way I'd do it if I was in charge of marketing. Graham
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I don't know. I've never seen pictures of it and actually forgot they were doing this. Unfortunately, no. But the 19 does have some interesting features that the photos haven't revealed yet. You mean the cover at the back of the neck? It's there on the 1/60, you can clearly see it in the new photos. Hopefully, Yamato will get the color right this time. I've already told them it should be black. Graham
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Err.....what are you talking about? None of the Yamato VFs have ever had transparent wingtip lights. While there are transparent lights on the front leadingedge of the 1/48 VF-1 and 1/60 VF-0, they are certainly not on the wingtip. Graham
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I find the 1/60 VF-0S landing gear much easier to deploy than the 1/48 VF-1 landing gear, especially the front. On the VF-0S, you can actually pull on the plastic tow-bar to get the landing gear out. Try that on a 1/48 and the tow-bar just comes of in your hands. Graham
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It's still not exactly Shin's version. 1) The Yamato 0A has dark stripes on the wings, Shin's 0A doesn't according to Hasegawa and the anime. 2) Shin's 0A has a white chest stripe, the Yamato doesn't. 3) The area around the sub-air intakes is white on the Yamato 0A chest plate, but not on Shin's anime/Hasegawa 0A. There are other differences as well. Graham
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I wouldn't be surprised if the HFH demanded that the VF-0D should be gray as well. That would be really bad, cause I think a VF-0D would suck in gray. 425313[/snapback] I have my Hasegawa VF-0D painted in grey and far prefer it to Shin's blue color. Graham
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Can't wait to see this. Doesn't open here til end of Aug though Graham
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Hopefully, SaveRobotech or other Japan based MWers will be attending and take pics. Sorry, there is no way I can get permission to post the pics I have. Graham
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According to the Compendium: YF-19 is 18.62m length in fighter mode. VF-0S is 18.69m length in fighter mode. Close, but the 19 is a bit shorter. Graham
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1/60 YF-19 is slightly shorter than the 1/60 VF-0S in Battroid & Fighter modes. Graham
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You should already be able to tell how Yamato have done the sensors, from te magazine pics already posted. After the VF-0S, do you eally think Yamato woold revert back to painted sensors. Graham
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Nope, not allowed to yet, but I can try telephathically beaming them to your head! ................................there...........................................did it work? Graham
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Beacuse if you show all the modes at once, then you have nothing to show in the magazines over the next few months and people may forget about the product. Showing each mode a few months apart helps build up anticipation and keeps it fresh in peoples minds. Graham
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It's probably just as easy to find to anime screen grabs showing the wings angled up or perfectly horizontal. Dosen't really prove much. Graham
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Early?, Wadda ya mean early, it's 8pm here ATM! Referring to David's post over the last few pages, I have to disagree that the YF-19's wings are supposed to have a downwards droop. Also, unless you want to have very slim legs in Battroid mode, it's not possible to have lower legs as slim as the non-transforming Hasegawa kit in fighter mode. Because Kawamori used a lot of anime magic when he designed the YF-19, any transforming toy is going to involve some compromises between modes. I think Yamato have managed to minimise this as much as possible. Comparisons with SHE or other resin kits are not valid for many reasons. Resin kits are designed without regards to durability or proper locking together of parts or decent joints. Show me the last time you saw a ratchet joint on a resin kit. I ended up thowing out my expensive SHE YF-19, as after relitively few transformations, it was a floopy mess that wouldn't stand in battroid mode and wouldn't hold together in fighter mode. The origami type rear lower leg system of folding panels, while it did allow the shoulder to sit lower in fighter mode, was quite fiddly and fragile and may not work to well in a toy. Graham Graham
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As I've been saying just like with the VF-0S, the actual product looks much better than the CAD art. Also, I wish people would stop comparing the Yamato YF-19 to the Hasgawa YF-19, especially as the Hasegawa is so skinny, it's positively anorexic and definitely skinnier than how Kawamri draws it. Graham