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Graham

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Everything posted by Graham

  1. I once looked at the idea of using the Hasegawa VF-22 canopy on a Yamato YF-21, but the size, shape and angle of the bottom edge of the canopy is all wrong. Graham
  2. Damn, that guy should try building an ARMD carrier or either the Prometheus or the Daedalus. Graham
  3. I voted...........hang on, am I allowed to vote? Graham
  4. There is no conversion kit to turn the Yamato YF-21 into a VF-22. If I recall correctly, the member that made that conversion did the following work: - 1) Cut gunpod shape holes in the leg bay cover panels, so the gunpods would fit in fighter mode. 2) Removed the paint from the cockpit canopy, so it is all clear. 3) painted the toy a lighter blue with white trim. Obviously, he also sculpted the new face, but I'm not sure how he did that or what he used. You can try PMing the member to ask him more details. His name is cahosgtx, but I think he is not very active on the forums. I should note that although the custom looks nice, it's not a totally accurate VF-22 as the canopy and leg bay cover panels are still not totally accurate to the lineart. Graham
  5. Graham

    1/72 Hcm Vf-1s

    The 1/72 HCM VF-1S was my second ever Macross toy, back in 1986 IIRC. Great toy, althogh care needs to be taken with the head lasers when transforming, as they are usually very tight to move. Graham
  6. For those of you that are interested, the new Shoji Kawamori Design Works Book features 2 page of color Eureaka 7 artwork and 16 pages of black and white lineart. Graham
  7. No way I would ever use a P90 or FN Five-Seven pistol for self defence unless I was being attacked by rabid bunnies. A calibre with the equivalent ballistics of a .22mag rimfire round is not my idea of a good fight stopper. The P90's got that Tacti-cool factor which wows a lot of people, but it's woefully underpowered for self-defence or CQB. Graham
  8. I botched the .22 magazine capacity and the Mosin-Nagant questions. Yes you are correct, you do not want to go anywhere near the SA-80. It was a sad day for the British army when they had to give up their FN-FALs for that unreliable, breakage-prone piece of junk. Graham
  9. Take The Gun Nut Test. I scored NRA Member You are 86% of a gun nut! You have excellent skills in weapons handling. I could definetly trust you to cover my back. Matter of fact, you're probably packing right now! Compared to other people of my age and gender I scored higher than 77% on knowledge. Graham
  10. Graham

    1/48 Gbp

    According to my source they will not be limited at this point, but will be a short run, so artificially limited unless there is enough demand for Yamato to do another run on them. 380565[/snapback] That is correct. Graham
  11. Gunhed was a live action movie from 1989, that Kawamori designed the principal mecha for. Just do a google search, there's lots of sites with info. Graham
  12. I'll second that. The earlier 'Shoji Kawamori Macross Design Works' book, published by Movic is a must have for Macross fans. Graham
  13. Who cares about Mobile Suits. Variable Fighters are where it's at. I'd much rather see countries fighting each other with VF-0 & SV-51 Graham
  14. The Stardust Memory black and white lineart occupies pages 116-119 and consists of the the finished design drawings of the GP-01, GP-01FB, GP-02, Core Fighters for the GP-01 & GP-01FB and the Albion spaceship. There is no color art and no early concept art. All of this art has appeared in various other Stardust Memory art books before. Graham
  15. One negative point regarding the FAST Packs on the VF-1 and VF-11 is that they really limit the pilots rearward visibility. Graham
  16. Well, if HG American Battlepods are anything like American cars in Hollywood movies, they probably explode into huge fireballs at the slightest bump. Graham
  17. I like most VF's with and without FAST Packs, no real preference either way. The one exception would be that I'm not really keen on the Ghost Booster on a VF-0 though. I think the VF-0 looks much better without it. Graham
  18. You're right, I'd forgotten about the VT-1 that get's stolen at the start of episode 1. Back on topic. Graham
  19. Yes, the Zola Galactic Whale Patrol were using the VF-5000G (single seat) and VF-5000T-G (two seater), although they also have one new VF-19P, which Basara ends up borrowing. The Galactic Whale Poachers (the bad guys) where mainly using the VA-3C Custom, a version of the VA-3 modified for hunting Galactic Whales. Although they did have other types of VF as well. Notably, a VF-11 can be seen chasing Lisa (elder sister of Elma) when she escapes in the stolen VF-17D in episode # 3. A civilian version of the VT-1, called the VT-1C belonging to my namesake character 'Graham' and was borrowed by Basara in episode one and then them badly damaged (rendered unflyable) when Basara flew to close to the Galactic Whales. And yes, back on topic please. Graham
  20. That picture is Tenjin's boxart for the upcoming Hasegawa 1/72 scale VF-0S/A battroid kit due for release later this month. I got the picture from the Hasegawa website. It's also been posted in the MW model forums. Unfortunately, that is the largest size I have been able to find so far. Back on topic to the book please. Graham
  21. Wow, huge exit wound from the 55mm round! Graham
  22. Whether a VF can continue in controlled flight in fighter mode in either atmosphere or space with the loss of one or both arms is going to vary greatly depending on individual VF design, whether one arm is lost or both and whether losing the arms contributes to the loss of either critical atmospheric contol surfaces or verniers for maneuvering in space. For the VF-1, VF-0, VF-11 and YF/VF-19, the arms are tucked out of the way between the legs in fighter mode and do not contribute at all to the ability to maneuver in atmosphere or space, so lossing one or both arms shouldn't affect things too greatly, assuming the VF can cope with any change to it's center of gravity. However, for VFs like the SV-51, VF-4, VF-5000, VF-17, YF-21 & VF-22, that feature vertical tail surfaces and/or verniers on the forearms or sholders, loss of an arm or arms could have a much more negative affect on flight. Although as mentioned above, we do know that the YF-21 and presumably the VF-22 as well, has the ability to eject damaged arms (and legs) and rely soley on it's thrust vectoring paddles. Graham
  23. The Macross Compendium has the following to say about the VF-5000 Star Mirage: - "Shinnakasu Heavy Industry and Stonewell Bellcom began their joint project of a general-purpose lightweight air superiority fighter designed for comparatively low mass production cost and simple maintenance in 2011. The design was based on the VF-1 Valkyrie's design with research on Zentradi technology. When the aerospace development divisions of both companies merged to form Shinsei Industry in 2012, the VF-5000 became the new company's first development project and mass-produced fighter. The fighter was mainly designed as a general-purpose lightweight support and air superiority fighter, and its roles expanded to include aggressor and trainer assignments after mass production ended. First flight 2018. Mass production of VF-5000 started 2020. Assumed the United Nations Forces' main fighter designation from the VF-4 (due to its lower costs) beginning in the later half of the 2020s until the VF-11 Thunderbolt's introduction. Mass production ends in 2029". The VF-5000 Star Mirage appears in the following productions: - Macross M3 for Dreamcast (VF-5000). Takes place during the years 2013 to 2030. Macross VF-X2 Special Edition for Playstation (VF-5000B). Takes place during the year 2051. Macross Dynamite 7 OVA (VF-5000G and VF-5000T-G). Takes place during the year 2047. Graham
  24. Ah, I didn't realise that. I thought he was the mecha designer for Escaflowne. Graham
  25. Haven't heard anything. Anyway, I don't mind posting two reviews. Graham
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