Final components
Before the head itself the backpack was to be done, and to be left waiting. I was almost optimizing by installing it already, but a quick "hey, let's check what's coming up still, just in case" check saved me and this build.
Random, weird and apparently verbose text about plastic models, 'mechs and gaming.
Before the head itself the backpack was to be done, and to be left waiting. I was almost optimizing by installing it already, but a quick "hey, let's check what's coming up still, just in case" check saved me and this build.
The shoulder with its pretty awful exhaust pipes was a bit of a weird setup to build. That still unclosed shiny, pointy bit in the first photo was the piece where the lower arm was attached later on. While working on this left arm, I didn't manage to attach all the four points, but it stayed tightly enough as it was.
Now that I got the legs done, I attached them to the hip block. With these the guy'd stay standing firm, unless the rest of his body wasn't too heavily off-balance.
Assembling Optimus started with the legs, the left shin to be more exact. As I've only lived through the G1/G2 properly, those box-protected wheels were a bit odd to me. Still, it looked plausible enough for me.
Of the usual Autobots, I had this idea that Bumblebee was just about the second-best known, right after Optimus. He used to have a bit more modern head at some point in the eighties, and returned to the original look after the Underbase storyline when Ratchet rebuilt him. Only because the medbot just preferred the old one. Why would you ask the guy himself what he wanted...
Who knows why the arms were the last things to build to this rohbut. The hand, forearm and the elbow were straightforwards builds and quickly connected.
Half a hood of a VW Beetle wasn't the simplest thing to build, but on a general level it didn't end up half bad. The curiously shaped curves raised the challenge a bit. Nicely the instructions didn't suggest the fender/wing needed to be bent into the final shape from the start, but it got tweaked in three stages whenever another thing was installed first. These feet were much more impressive to view from the front than the ankle side.
Building Bumblebee started from the hat-holder department. As a kid I had somehow liked Goldbug's look more than Bumblebee's, but as these were matters of taste, there wasn't much to argue here. Again I had some difficulties preparing the curved surfaces without a handy item to roll against.