Welcome to my strange alternative world of wargaming with toy soldiers: a game for boys from twelve years of age to one hundred and fifty and for that more intelligent sort of girl who likes boys' games and books (HG Wells, Little wars)
Friday, 7 December 2018
Cutting Down A Full Hull Ship Kit
You know the problem: the only kit that covers the model you want in the scale you want is inevitably full hull. So what is the easiest way to convert it to a waterline model suitable for wargaming?
Do not take a saw to the plastic; that way leads to shattering.
Use a sharp knife to score the unmade hull sides along the waterline. Many kids have lines marking the waterline as painting guides... And these work equally well as scoring guides for the blade.
If not then mark the waterline with tape. Airbrush masking tape is fine.
Use the knife lightly, repeating on a small length, say two inches, as many times as required. Resist the urge to press hard and take your time. You are trying to score the plastic, not cut it.
When a section is suitably scored, gently bend the plastic to snap it along the score line. Repeat along the hull half until it is broken in two.
You should have two halves as above .
Cement the two hull halves to the decking and check for rigidity. It should be fine but add supports as needed.
The underside should be pretty square but there will be slight notches and bumps.
Now sand down the model base on a flat surface, gently pushing the model across the sandpaper. Resist the urge to push hard.
The final waterline model should sit neatly on a flat surface.
Nice work, John.
ReplyDeleteWhat's the model?
It's a Heller 1:400 T23 Torpedoboot.. ..i.e. destroyer.
DeleteDear John,
ReplyDeleteHow many tries did it take you to figure that technique out, or did it spring full-blown from your head?
Dave
Years of cutting off bits of my anatomy including two trips to A&E to have them glued back on ... ☺️
Delete