IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945 - COMPLETED
Moderators: MartinJQuinn, JIM BAUMANN, Jon, Dan K
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Joe Simon
- Posts: 825
- Joined: Sat Jan 24, 2009 5:16 pm
- Location: Wisconsin
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
Thank you Wojtek, Gewoon and Dan!
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marijn van gils
- Posts: 2686
- Joined: Tue Feb 06, 2007 10:24 am
- Location: Belgium
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
Very nice work Joe!
The halyards look very good!
The halyards look very good!
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**Mac**
- Posts: 24
- Joined: Sat Dec 21, 2013 4:00 pm
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
Hey Joe,
I�m working on the hull right now and I�m curious after doing so much work on the main seem, how you were able to either keep the Plating detail or reproduce it. I found after over sanding the glue off the seem I�m left with a oil canning effect in that area. I�m worried if i touch it anymore it will really be an eye sore
I�m working on the hull right now and I�m curious after doing so much work on the main seem, how you were able to either keep the Plating detail or reproduce it. I found after over sanding the glue off the seem I�m left with a oil canning effect in that area. I�m worried if i touch it anymore it will really be an eye sore
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Joe Simon
- Posts: 825
- Joined: Sat Jan 24, 2009 5:16 pm
- Location: Wisconsin
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
I used Tamiya tape (1/4) inch to mask the low areas. I then sprayed on copious amounts of Tamiya Primer thinner with laquer thinner. I sanded and sprayed and unmasked the low areas and then sparyed the entire thing until I was satisfied with it. Took a while to get the correct look. Hope this helps.
IMG_1188 by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_1187 by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_1186 by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_5574 by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_1188 by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_1187 by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_1186 by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_5574 by Joseph Simon, on Flickr-
Joe Simon
- Posts: 825
- Joined: Sat Jan 24, 2009 5:16 pm
- Location: Wisconsin
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
Pontos crane and catapults are complete. They are complex kits unto themselves:
IMG_6916A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6915A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6914A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6912A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6909A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6880A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6859A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6903A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6901A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6899A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6916A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6915A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6914A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6912A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6909A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6880A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6859A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6903A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6901A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6899A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr-
Dan K
- Posts: 9037
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- Location: New York City
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
Wonderful work, Joe.
- GewoonWouter
- Posts: 225
- Joined: Sat Mar 26, 2016 2:58 am
- Location: Belgium
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
Nice work Joe. I assembled the Pontos crane and catapults couple of years ago and while complex, I really enjoyed assembling them, one of the more fun etch things to build. Nice painting as well, must have been a pain in the bum to reach every nook and cranny 
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Joe Simon
- Posts: 825
- Joined: Sat Jan 24, 2009 5:16 pm
- Location: Wisconsin
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
Thank Dan and Gewoon! I paint the etch before assembling it. I first clean it with lacquer thinner. I then hit it with etching primer. Then then main color. After I assemble I use a hand brush or light airbrush to cover the brass showing after construction.
- LE BOSCO
- Posts: 2261
- Joined: Thu Aug 27, 2009 11:05 am
- Location: Paris France
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
hello joe
very nice work on the hull! on the rest of course
well done
cheers
Nicolas
very nice work on the hull! on the rest of course
well done
cheers
Nicolas
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sandman-therealone
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
Wasn't this supposed to be a 1945 build? Knowing that Yamato's crane tower was removed during late 1944 refit, is there any particular reason you decided to install it anyway? I know that there are people that think Yamato looked better with its crane tower (and associated aft rigging) installed, but as far as I am concerned, it kind of hurts seeing such a promising work like yours slipping away from historical accuracy.
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Joe Simon
- Posts: 825
- Joined: Sat Jan 24, 2009 5:16 pm
- Location: Wisconsin
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
Sorry to disappoint you. I'm actually modeling it in March 45. Both the latest Skulski book and the 1/10th scale model in Kure show it with the crane in it's 1945 configuration. Most assume a 45 Yamato is modeled right before it sailed with canvas bags, no crane tripod and no aircraft and with the deck painted black. I'm modeling it before that point to show her in all her glory.
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sandman-therealone
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
I see...The crane tower was out by the end of 1944. All 1945 aerial pictures of Yamato confirm that (including the Inland Sea pictures from March 1945 for that matter).Joe Simon wrote:I'm actually modeling it in March 45. Both the latest Skulski book and the 1/10th scale model in Kure show it with the crane in it's 1945 configuration.
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Joe Simon
- Posts: 825
- Joined: Sat Jan 24, 2009 5:16 pm
- Location: Wisconsin
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
Could you please post the March 1945 aerial photos you're talking about in this thread?
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sandman-therealone
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
Sorry, I'm posting as a guest so I'm not allowed to upload any pictures on this forum. Nevertheless, if you do a net search you will most certainly find them - one in particular with a couple of near miss bombs splashes while Yamato was executing a "sharp" port side turn (March 1945, Inland Sea). That picture is particularly interesting as the white of the sea foam left behind the ship makes the stern details more distinguishable.
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Joe Simon
- Posts: 825
- Joined: Sat Jan 24, 2009 5:16 pm
- Location: Wisconsin
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
All 4 float planes are finally done. 3 F1M2 'Petes' ad one E13A Jake. I used Hasegawa planes and the rainbow seaplane set:
IMG_6974_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6975_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6977_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6979_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6980_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6982_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6983_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6988_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6989_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6992_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6974_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6975_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6977_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6979_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6980_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6982_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6983_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6988_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6989_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr
IMG_6992_A by Joseph Simon, on Flickr- GewoonWouter
- Posts: 225
- Joined: Sat Mar 26, 2016 2:58 am
- Location: Belgium
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
another update, good to see. I was lurking in the corner waiting for it
. Floatplanes are well executed. Nice!
- MartinJQuinn
- Posts: 8512
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- Location: New Jersey
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
Those float planes look sharp, Joe!
Martin
"Tomorrow is the most important thing in life. Comes into us at midnight very clean. It's perfect when it arrives and it puts itself in our hands. It hopes we've learned something from yesterday." John Wayne
Ship Model Gallery
"Tomorrow is the most important thing in life. Comes into us at midnight very clean. It's perfect when it arrives and it puts itself in our hands. It hopes we've learned something from yesterday." John Wayne
Ship Model Gallery
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Dan K
- Posts: 9037
- Joined: Tue Jan 11, 2005 10:56 am
- Location: New York City
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
Beautiful, Joe.
Just out of curiosity, why the Hasegawa versions? Are the Tamiya versions not as sharp?
Just out of curiosity, why the Hasegawa versions? Are the Tamiya versions not as sharp?
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Joe Simon
- Posts: 825
- Joined: Sat Jan 24, 2009 5:16 pm
- Location: Wisconsin
Re: IJN Yamato, 1/350, 1945
Thank you Gewoon, Martin and Dan! Dan, the Hasegawa Jakes have better panel detail. They also have a blank spot for the canopy whereas Tamiya has a molded on canopy that must be removed if you want real glass. The Petes are comparable but Tamiya has molded on canopies that must be removed from there as well.
- blacman
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- Location: Poland, Wroclaw
