Building The AH-1G Cobra Reviews
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David L. Veres on Cybermodeler
I love constructing classic kits. And with time, talent, and tenacity, you
can turn old, putatively obsolete models into tours de force of accuracy
and appeal.
Now Richard Marmo proves it in Building The Revell 1/32 scale Bell AH-1G
Cobra in a Viet Nam Vignette – eighth in the author’s “Marmo Method
Modelbuilding Guide” range.
Downloadable from scalepublications.freeyellow.com, the convenient,
printable PDF traverses the total topic in nine, how-to chapters across 49
fact-packed pages in two parts – the build and the vignette:
Introduction
Bell AH-1G
The Model
Cockpit
Details
Camouflage
Final Touches...On The Model
The Revetment
What A Vignette Is
The Base
Finishing The Vignette
The Dust Cover
Marmo prefers the term “vignette” – “a small diorama”. It’s “essentially a
way to display your model in a natural setting without making things too
complicated” – sometimes “nothing more than a natural ground base with the
model sitting on it”.
Alone, he argues, a scale plastic kit can be “beautifully built and
finished masterpiece. But incorporate it into either a diorama or vignette
and the model comes to life.”
First released in 1967, Revell’s Vietnam-era AH-1G, Marmo’s central
subject, still remains the only Cobra kit to 1/32 scale. And he upgrades
it with the aftermarket Cobra Company resin cockpit interior – available
again from Lone Star Models.
Using an 8-1⁄2” x 11” sheet of 100 or 120 grit sandpaper affixed to a
clipboard – a useful and clever tip – Marmo shows how to dress, clean, and
install the resin set.
From that point, Marmo recommends color matches, prepares subassemblies,
adds external ordinance, paints camouflage, surmounts pitfalls, and
completes construction.
Text then turns to the display. There Marmo similarly walks you through
the process. Planning. Preparation. Production. Tools. Techniques. And
tips – including carpentry commentary!
Best of all, you can apply Marmo’s “methods” to a wide range of
scale-modeling projects.
But the possessive of “it” is “its” – not “it’s”. The author employs paint
brands that haven’t been available for years. Always wear a dust mask when
working with potentially toxic resin materials. And always spray
solvent-based paints in properly ventilated areas.
Make Marmo’s privately produced, illustrated E-Book part of your hobby
references.
Recommended!
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