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10.4.19

A minion for the forearm

Laserbeak!

Soundwave was now mostly completed, now I was strangely enough, instructed to work on one of his minions before his head or the shoulder-mounted Laser Cannon. The colourless bird could've been named either way, I decided to default to Laserbeak.


The top half consisted mostly of the torso plate, head and those engine-gun bits on the back. Lots of tiny bends were to be made but it turned out very recognizeable very quickly.



Finishing Laserbeak up was decently simple a task. Connect the legs to the belly part: check; belly part's edges up: check. Then connecting that piece to the top half was otherwise very easy but the backmost attachment piece came out so tactically close to every other subassembly that my poor eyes gave me a hard time seeing what went where and what was I actually supposed to twist and bend for proper tightness.


Below: a completed Laserbeak on the back of my hand. It wasn't large by any measure, even though you might not be able to get a clear sense of scale from this silly pic.


Next I installed Soundwave's missing arm on its place before proceeding. The instructions wanted the left arm to be pointing forward but I had gone and mirrored the other arm, not noticing the tiny difference in the booklet.

So, Laserbeak didn't quite fit sitting as it was supposed to be, on the forearm, but there was always going to be space on the shoulders of his master. Maybe with some gentle violence I could make him sit on the arm, too.

3.4.19

Another arm

A very short report

Thanks to the everyday busyness just building the left arm was all I managed for this post during a single sitting. Being an unarmed arm it was a tiny bit quicker to assemble, but that didn't help me that much in the end. I also didn't attach this arm onto the torso yet, as I thought that this'd make the next stepset a bit easier. Or not, we'd see.



27.3.19

The right hand of Megatron's right hand

The arm with a blaster

In the middle of my rush of building I didn't remember to take any pics, so what was left to show is the fully armed and operational severed arm. In his hand Soundwave carried an AA-battery-like concussion blaster.

The attachment of the gun and the hand were the weakest ones in the whole submodule, mostly because one of the locking pieces would've blocked the gun's attachers if bent as intended. So I twisted them however I had to in order to get the pieces tightishly together. Or that's what I hoped.



Somehow the instructions wanted me to keep RA off from CT at this point, but after consulting the remaining steps I decided that I know better and attached it anyway. This again helped the feeling of actual progress, as my mighty rohbut was another step closer to being perfect instead of me waiting for both arms to be ready before taking another large leap.



20.3.19

No torso twists here

Center of mass

After working on the legs the next natural piece was the hip chunk that was practically, as his alternative form required, the control button set of a ghettoblaster: ffwd and rwd buttons, a massive play button and the stop/rec buttons that oddly enough had the same identical engravings on them. Maybe I could survive this weirdness.



To accompany the hip controls I assembled the main torso, that being the cassette deck part of his. Somehow all these MEM sets that had this funny "this flilmsy bit here will be held a millimeter from everything else with these even flimsier tiny risers here" parts have always ended up being out of shape in my not too gentle hands.


Somehow, while assembling these tiny boxes, I just got the feeling that I wasn't doing any real progress at all. Just when I was about to complain the instructions directed me to stack these submodules into their places and the guy just progressed by leaps and bounds. Attaching all these '80s-style boxiness was quick and fun, the tiny 45-degree angles didn't slow it down at all.


Just look at him, he's already very recognizeable! All that was missing were the arms, the head and the whoknowswhat from his shoulder. Almost done.


13.3.19

Another leg day

The rest of the bipedaling bits

I continued working on the left leg for the short time that was remaining. That being the installation of the foot into the ankle and then restarting the process for the right leg.



The finished legs were tightly installed into the base of the hip. This subassembly then was to be attached to the baseplate and because the legs were pointing arrow-straight (Picture 3) they needed to be forced open a bit so that they'd connect with the base in a bit less stiff pose (Picture 4). This wasn't the first time when a "completed" component had to be bent or twisted against the connectors and especially against its own natural angles and that has made me queasy every single time it's been done. I really, really didn't want to break them at this point when I couldn't fix or cheat my way out of it.



6.3.19

Leg day

Getting started

This model got along on the wrong foot and as the photos below revealed, what little I got done in the first 45mins. There were quite a few tiny bits as greeblies and as the original was a Japanese mecha design from the eighties, it had funny flaps and whatnot. And this was just the thigh + shank part of the first leg.

It was ridiculously slow going, but as we have grown accustomed to, my burn rate would improve noticeably as I got back up to speed and especially when working on the mirrored pieces. I've learned something over the years and kits, seeing that I didn't push any of the attachment bits into my thumb this time, either!




27.2.19

Project I/19

Soundwave

The beardy man had brought new buildables for me because I didn't have enough already, and I didn't even know (or more likely, I just didn't remember) that MEM made more Transformers than just Megatron. Bwahahahahahahaaa!





Heeey, wait a moment... there, in the lower right corner...

Laserbeak!

20.2.19

Finished: Project IV/18

Ju-87 B-2 trop

According to Wikipedia the Stuka B was the first mass-produced model and the B-2 was also had a tropical variant. So, the idea I had completely pulled out of my hat was a technically believableish solution! This has not happened often here.

S 7 + A T

At some point a couple of those claw-like bits from the bottom of the airframe had fallen off, ended who knows where and I had no idea where. On this "no glue needed" model, no less. I guess I could've gone all my wip pics and posts backwards to find out, but what'd it fix at this point?

Below I have dropped my traditional walk-around -like photoset from a distance more or less that someone could actually have had while walking around a real world example. I didn't think of hunting down a few same-scale little folks to provide that sort of scale.












Perhaps I should finally consider seriously buing one of those ~40¤ collapsable photobox, I saw one at the office last autumn, it looked convenient enough. I mean, I've survived so far the way I've done my silly photos, sometimes bothering to gimp off the silliest nonsense to /dev/null, but if I could get away with less effort...







Recycling

Because I could, I took the baseplate I had made for an ancient MiG-29 project, even though a more serious hobbyist could assume that there weren't maybe that many ill-maintained, prefab-concrete slab airfields (or airplane parking areas for that matter) in the early '40s. With the dry grass and wind-blown sand the plate somehow felt like it fit the mood of the model. Someone who wasn't that suspicious of ending on weird watchlists could almost hear the fliers singing Stuka über Afrika! or something like it. Those krauts sure got busy making up weird-ass songs... wtf.