June 9, 2024
New tool, new technique and the advice from those that have gone before me. The scribing is finished. Is it perfect? No. Is it really rough in spots? Oh yeah. Is it as good as I'd like it? Not really, but I'm happy with it being my first attempt and I now have figured out a technique that works for me that will yield positive results next time.
Like I said in an earlier posting, I really wrecked havoc on the tubes on my first attempt. I did the best I could filling in the lines/gouges I had previously made with Bondo. I'm by far not not proclaiming myself an overnight expert but this is what I discovered worked for me.
I had posted some pics over on the
Nerf Herder' Workshop Facebook group and Lee Ralph was kind enough to shoot me a short video showing the tool he used and some useful pointers.
He recommended the Tamiya Engraver Tool and I have to say, combined with other things, it changed my game. I think there's a name for those kind of things. The blades and handle are sold separately and will set you back about $50.00 but it was totally worth it.
This time around rather than drawing pencil lines and going off them I took a different approach. I used a combination of parts maps and existing parts glued in place for reference. Once I determined the line I was going to scribe I used Dymo tape as guide from point A to point B.
Regarding my new scribing technique, the first thing I changed up was how I held the blade. Rather than gripping the handle like a pencil I rested it in my hand with my index at the blade tip to apply and control the pressure at the tip. My middle finger acts as a support and guide as the blade is pulled back, very much like someone doing pin striping.
Second, I kept the blade at 90 degrees to the surface at all times. This along with keeping the handle parallel to the Dymo tape made for a uniform line and prevented the corner edge of the blade tip from either wanting to wander or gouge the surface. I noticed that the couple times that the blade strayed it was because I wasn't doing one of those two things.
Finally, like has been said many times before, several light passes works! I know, I know, you tried to tell me but I get it now. My new knife and technique of holding it really allows me to feel what "light" really means. My old Tamiya panel line scriber is like using a linoleum knife.
The only rough going really came from the spots I had filled in with Bondo. The were soft and the filler would sometimes either chip or yield a wider line.
The position of some parts needed to be figured out for the lines and that included the bomb pod.
With the bomb pod in place I cut loose and glued on the remaining greeblies and chips.
Like I said at the beginning it's looking rough. It's got a lot of "bruising" right now from Bondo and sanding but I'm confident that once I hit it with some filler primer it will look a lot better.
I'm still new to the world of studio scale models and there are a lot of things where I'm waiting for my skills to catch up with my talent. It's been a journey but I feel I'm at the halfway mark.