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Spanner's brush painted Revell 1/72 Lancaster BI/III.

Now you have revealed the mistake ,which i didnt see anyway , its totally ruined it for me , this type of sloppiness really makes my blood boil , I shall be writing to my MP ,
Yours Angry of Sheffield ;)
 
Thread owner
Listen Sunshine, it's taken me an age to reach such a high degree of sloppiness - and have the balls to go public with it too!

So, in future please have a bit more respect for your elders ( By quite some margin)

Next April, just make sure you take a good look at the Tunnock I might hand you.

Yours,
Happy and contented of Chester.
 
The old dear's come out rather well. And there was never any chance of me spotting a 0.5mm error. But let's be honest. I'm guessing this could have happened on a real aircraft. It's not like you can stand back (or above) and compare the two for real. That's your 'get out of jail card' Carry on.
 
Hi Ron

I meant to ask, what did you use for the rigging? I do a bit of fishing every now and again and was wondering if heavier gauge mono-filament line might do the job. It's a brown-ish colour BTW.

Well done again.

ATB

Andrew
 
Fantastic Ron. Top build. Some of those images would look awesome in black and white. Looks like the real thing.
 
Thread owner
Thanks chaps. Nice to see this taxi-ing into dispersal again.

Hi Andrew.
I used ezeline. It's thin, stretchy nylon. I'm probably wrong, but I believe it's something to do with fishing. Easy to paint too.

Thanks Steve.
As requested, a couple of pickies in B/W from this thread.

P1260049 (2).JPG


P1260071 (2).JPG


Cheers all, stay safe and sound.

Ron
 
Hi Ron. Didn't want to do this without checking with you first but do you mind if I send your Lanc pictures taken in dusk light to my brother, He would be very interested to see them.
 
Thread owner
Hi Ron. Didn't want to do this without checking with you first but do you mind if I send your Lanc pictures taken in dusk light to my brother, He would be very interested to see them.

Steve, of course you can, and I'm chuffed you think them good enough to share with others.

Ron
 
Well Ron, did not get soaked catching up on this! Hope you are well. Cracking build, one on my wish list.
Coming back very soon, Tamiya 1:32 Spitfire IXc just arrived, so getting mojo back in action.
Cheers
A
 
Thread owner
Thanks for the posts Ian and Alun.

Alun, great to see you back and posting again.

I look forward to looking in on your Spitfire build.

Ron
 
Well painted Lanc Ron, painting with a brush is an artform which the Japanese still do to their lacquered containers like Bento boxes and bowls. It's a thumbs up for brush painters for me here. :thumb2: The mis-aligned decal isn't that obvious unless you're purposely looking out for errors and comments from rivet counters shouldn't stop us from having fun building. You do need to weight your tyres though...I can't help but see a helium filled Lanc. :tears-of-joy:...getting my coat.....taxi!!!

Cheers,
Richard
 
Thread owner
........you do need to weight your tyres though...I can't help but see a helium filled Lanc. :tears-of-joy:...getting my coat.....taxi!!!

Cheers,
Richard


...ah, but Richard, all is not what it seems to the casual viewer, and your writings are absolutely spot on....Quite uncanny really, so top marks, as no one else spotted the aircraft for what it is!

What you see is indeed a helium filled prototype being tested by the British Air Ministry in early '43. If accepted, they were to be manufactured en-mass, then placed in groups around rural Lincolnshire, giving the impression of the RAF having far more operational Heavy Bombers than they actually had.

Unfortunately, the plan was a failure. The 'Blow ups' did just that and blew up! This was put down to an excess of a rather aggressive strain of bees, which hatched during the very warm summer of 1943, all trying to make new homes, and not as was first thought, the very hot weather expanding the gas .

Thank you for your post.

Your Servants.
Joseph and Jacques Montgolfier.

Balloon Makers Extraordinaire (any shape, any size)
 
...ah, but Richard, all is not what it seems to the casual viewer, and your writings are absolutely spot on....Quite uncanny really, so top marks, as no one else spotted the aircraft for what it is!

What you see is indeed a helium filled prototype being tested by the British Air Ministry in early '43. If accepted, they were to be manufactured en-mass, then placed in groups around rural Lincolnshire, giving the impression of the RAF having far more operational Heavy Bombers than they actually had.

Unfortunately, the plan was a failure. The 'Blow ups' did just that and blew up! This was put down to an excess of a rather aggressive strain of bees, which hatched during the very warm summer of 1943, all trying to make new homes, and not as was first thought, the very hot weather expanding the gas .

Thank you for your post.

Your Servants.
Joseph and Jacques Montgolfier.

Balloon Makers Extraordinaire (any shape, any size)

Matron! Come quick! Ron's off his meds again and floating off to cloud cuckoo land!:anguished::anguished: Do something - we don't want to lose him!
 
Sorry Ron I thought I’d posted on this one ages ago. Cracking work pal.
 
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