Lovecraft0110 wrote: ↑29 Jun 20, 09:01 I'm afraid it's far worse than mold lines on plastic models...mold slip means it's not level, i.e. it requires filling, not just filing.I've had this even on tiny finecast miniatures.. and it's an ache of the ball variety. Can only imagine how much work will be involved in something this big!! Good luck buddy!
As for the weight, I think about 5-6 kg. all in all, haven't weighed it, though.
James wrote: ↑29 Jun 20, 14:07Thank you, I'm seriously gonna need it! Ache of the ball indeed.Lovecraft0110 wrote: ↑29 Jun 20, 09:01 I'm afraid it's far worse than mold lines on plastic models...mold slip means it's not level, i.e. it requires filling, not just filing.I've had this even on tiny finecast miniatures.. and it's an ache of the ball variety. Can only imagine how much work will be involved in something this big!! Good luck buddy!
As for the weight, I think about 5-6 kg. all in all, haven't weighed it, though.
pawl wrote: ↑29 Jun 20, 14:49 We expect a video detailing your learnings I'll have to look him up, always happy for something to watch!Yeah, I'm totally used to pinning. As in, my MKII World Eaters have the hands pinned to the arms, the arms to the torsos, and the feet to the bases...every single guy...so yeah. So that part is not an issue in and by itself. The problem will be having everything align, getting the right pose, not glueing things in the wrong place...lol. If I glue something wrong with JB Weld, there is no going back. EVER.
Pinning on a serious scale!
I find it odd though that the weapons (as smaller, simpler components) get a modern instruction booklet, but the intricate, million-pound-price-tag body gets an old photocopy!