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Posted

Did Hasegawa ever do anything to correct the massive engine droop on their 1/72 VF-1 mold? I know the 1/48 doesn't do it, and I've seen people mod the 1/72s to fix it, but I haven't looked at those kits in a long time.

Posted

Did Hasegawa ever do anything to correct the massive engine droop on their 1/72 VF-1 mold? I know the 1/48 doesn't do it, and I've seen people mod the 1/72s to fix it, but I haven't looked at those kits in a long time.

No corrections for the 1/72 engine connector peices. Not in any of the ones in my stash anyway

I wonder how difficult it would be to cast a replacement/corrected part...

Posted

I wonder how difficult it would be to cast a replacement/corrected part...

I would say it would be a lot more difficult than just slightly modifying the mounting slot on the original thigh piece to correct the droop.

Posted (edited)

VF-1S_0009.jpg

VF1_fighter_side_study.jpg

Edited by NZEOD
Posted (edited)

On mine, I put the legs together as normal, but only used a little dot of glue to hold the leg insert. After attaching the intake to the fuselage, I slid on the lower leg and rotated it upward until it just made contact with the back plate.

Then I slid it off, added some glue on the insert & a dab of glue on the back plate.

Simpler, with the desired effect. My work probably wasn't as straight as that guy's in the magazine, but would have been worse using that technique.

Edited by Kelsain
Posted (edited)

I've built 2 so far forgetting to fix the legs until it was too late! Luckily one of them is in the Hallway museum display so will never been viewed from side on! Unfortunately the other is a 1D on the carrier deck display and its SO F-ing obvious! Cant fix that one without ripping the engine lighting wires out.

Edited by NZEOD
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Well that sucks... no EX Gear pilot.

Pass

  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

Seems to me I remember hearing that the cockpit does not fit into the fuselage real good on the hasegawa 1/48 scale kit. Have you gotten to this part yet? How is it going?

Posted

I'm in the middle of building a 1/48 right now, actually it's been over year since I started it. I think the cockpit assembly fit better on the 1/48 than it does on the 1/72. Just my opinion though.

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted (edited)

It's out. HLJ hasn't sent a payment request for mine yet though....

Pics of the trees and manual up on Hobby Search

http://www.1999.co.jp/eng/image/10396131/10/0

I assumed we'd be getting a whole new resin cockpit tub, but it seems the resin part ride on top of the old tub. No new trees/parts aside form the two resin chunks. Oh well, should still be fun building best OTP.

EDIT: thank god the black pinstripe decal is separate

Edited by TMBounty_Hunter
Posted

Hmmm can you buy frames from Bandai as replacement parts like you can for Hasegawa? If so, couldnt we use the replacement frames with the pilots from our VF-31s then?

Posted

Depends how well scaled the Bandai VF-31 pilots are. I know the VF-25 Bandai kits had pilots that looked decidedly 1/100 scale and definitely not 1/72.

Posted

I'll pull one out tonight and compare it

Posted

The Bandai pilots are just the upper halves; the lower halves are molded into the cockpit. (Unless you're talking about something else...?)

I'm hoping I can use the lower torso and legs off the Hasegawa or Fujima pilot and crew kits. Full legs arent needed as you cant see up under the console.

Posted (edited)

The Bandai pilots are just the upper halves; the lower halves are molded into the cockpit. (Unless you're talking about something else...?)

Yeah, that's true. But the proportions are way off too. The VF-25 kits proportionally, were just too small. Things like the arms, bodies and heads just didn't scale well to Hasegawa 1/72 pilots.

I'm hoping the VF-31 (and SV-262) kits have fixed that but it wouldn't surprise me if they're the same size.

Edited by mickyg
Posted

That's true... I wonder why that is? Maybe due to (I think) the thicker plastic they use for canopies leaving less room? Or it could just be Bandai's iffy relationship with pilot scale.

Posted (edited)

It's kind of a multi-layered problem, because Bandai also doesn't really seem to understand how pilots fit into cockpits, or how tightly all the components of an aircraft are actually crammed into the fuselage. Really, the plastic is far too thick everywhere. With the transforming kits? I really think it's just the way they're engineered with so many layered panels for structural integrity prioritized over any cockpit detail.

Really though, Bandai has no consistency in this regard across any of their kit lines that I've seen. Oddities in ship scales not withstanding, their Star Wars kits have absolutely beautifully molded cockpits and pilots. But then I went to put together one of their Cosmo Zero kits from Yamato 2199, and while the pilot looks nicely molded, the cockpit itself feels like it's far too deep in the fuselage, and the pilot can't even see out the canopy.

Bandai absolutely knows how to manufacture incredibly molded and detailed kits, it just seems like the engineers designing them vary widely in how they approach things, and what details they focus on.

Edited by Chronocidal
Posted

Description says pilot is from another kit

from one of the Hasegawa VF-25's I'd wager

  • 3 months later...

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