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promethuem5

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Posts posted by promethuem5

  1. Stupid question but, does CMS offer an US customer service? I realized today that the OVA version Ingram I bought from HLj has two of the same side chest-light covers instead of one for each side, so I can't display it without the chest lights, which fall off really easily. I bought it from HLJ ages ago when it was on clearance and only now noticed.

  2. OMG that looks awful. Like a transformer you would find at walmart. The mold is nice and getting a SDF clone at that scale was so exciting now that paint scheme cheapens it so much and not worth the 200 plus price tag. Why??? I had scanned a pic of it from Dengeki Hobby and it wasn't colored like that. This is a deal breaker for me. Im cancelling my preorder with HLJ and decided to go ahead and buy the PG Red Astray

    I dont want a cute skiddles SDF clone

    BBBAAAAAAAWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW! :rolleyes:

  3. I actually wouldn't recommend a netbook if this is going to be your friend's primary computer. Sure, they're cute and ridiculously portable, but that's about it. From my experience, netbooks tend to be sluggish, and the screen resolution is too low to be productive in Office. And that doesn't even touch on the limited hard drives, lack of RAM, lack of an optical drive, or the fact that most netbook still come with XP, and even the ones that do have Windows 7 have Windows 7 starter.

    IIRC, you're in Australia, so I'm not sure what the pricing is like over there. But in the US, most netbooks are still around $300, and it's very possible to find regular laptops for $350. And even the cheapest laptops around all seem to have 15.6" screens, 2-3GB of RAM, either Pentium Dual Core or Athlon X2 dual-core processors, 320GB hard drives, and Windows 7 Home Premium.

    I can sympathize with some of this, but I haven't noticed it to be too bad... I'm running Win7 release on mine and it works loads better than the XP install from the factory did. 1GB of RAM and a 1.7GHz processor aren't spectacular, but they get the job done for every day uses. When I am home on short breaks, I use my netbook for doing paperwork for my dad's business, including editing photos in CS3 and making PDFs, as well as writing documents in Office07 without any problems. Mutlitasking can get to be a bit of a chore if you're doing aLOT of work, but for writing a document every now and then I have no problem working in Office or any of those other programs. As for mass storage, I use external HDDs for all of that at this point... I have two 1TB fullsize ones, as well as a portable USB-powered 500GB that I will probably upgrade to a TB after the holidays as well... that's where all my media files besides music... externals are also really cheap at this point, but even still, it's not like you are going to fill up a 160GB internal HDD in an afternoon.

    EDIT: That said, the lack of an optical drive is sometimes inconvinent, only because have only one USB drive that gets left at home for my parents. My netbook will also lag a bit when trying to watch high-def videos... I can't watch the 720p Shin Mazinger fansub files on here because they don't render right. Normal crap like a 700mb compressed DVD-quality film are fine tho.

  4. I got an Acer AspireOne for Christmas least year with the doubled-up 6-hour battery pack and love it. I use it primarily for internet thru Firefox, listening to music, and playing Plants vs. Zombies. It has a 160GB HDD, so it's got plenty of space, and the only time it really lags is if you're on the internet and trying to load a lot of images all on one page, and even then it just hangs for a second and keeps chugging... the performance is rock solid, and it's the only computer I own that I NEVER have actual problems with. It's my little buddy and I carry it around always at school. The keyboard isn't even so bad that you can't comfortable type... I take notes in class on it, and use it when I'm home on break as my main comp without any complaints.

  5. I don't see how any of you could prefer the rubber joint covers to the cloth ones on the CMS figure... they're CLOTH, and they move just like the cloth covers on the 'real' thing... they look so much better than any rubber joint covers and they don't affect the posability at all. Rubber joints are awful.

  6. What I REALLY want to see are some mini MINI valkyries! Like the "Smallest Transformers" series. They could make them similar to the Chunky Monkeys, only they would be tiny!

    These toys exist... you want the Kaiyodo Gashapon figures from a couple years ago: Review here.

  7. i just posted this because I just want yamato to atleast use that plastic thats as strong or stronger then steal that would certainly make a strong figure

    By all means, when you find this plastic for use in toys, let us know... we'll make gazillions.

    Until then, I think you oughta work on putting your thoughts into words and then text on the screen so you can effectively convey said ideas to the rest of us. As it stands, I'm just about certain some part of what you're trying to tell us is getting lost in 'translation'.

  8. I got my masterpiece Skywarp, and I love it. Just one question. There's this clamp that the thing came with, and it clips onto the underside of the base, but the instructions don't mention what to do with it. Does anybody know?

    If it's a round clip, it's likely the part that they used to hold the Megatron pistol to the underside of the jet.

  9. Like I said, artists' matte varnish... water soluble and thins down no problem to a brushable or sprayable mix. Most cost effective and most dead flat finish I've found.

    EDIT: Take a look at some of my pics... pretty much anything with a flat finish has either been sprayed or brushed with the stuff.

    EDIT2: Here's an example: All the teeth and claws were brush painted with thinned down artists' matte varnish. This shot provides a pretty good contrast with the shiny viny

    sky5.png

  10. A "knock less glossy" is a far cry from 'flat'. I could get a sort of satiny finish, but let me know if you can get a FLAT finish from Future. (I was mainly using Tamiya flat base in my experiments, as it's what's listed in Swanny's Future guide)

    OK, I understand what you meant now, but I guess I don't understand the reason. Like I said above, I use Future as my catch-all sealer now, and then just have other varnishes of varying finishes for the final coat, if needed. I use an artists' UV Polymer Varnish (matte) for my dead-flat coats now... picked it up from an art supply store in a big-ass jar like two years ago (brand: Golden Varnish) and have never looked back... you can think it to just about the same consistency as Future and airbrush it in two coats to the most perfectly dead flat I have ever seen... it's perfect for stuff like tanks and whatnot, and I love to finish most of my vinyl customs in dead flat as well. For 'just satin' I just spray or brush the Vallejo stuff. Vallejo Matte has just a bit of a sheen to it, but it has its uses, and their Gloss has a nice plasticy look that can be useful in some applications.

  11. Yes, Future brushes better than anything else on the planet--but it's not just "gloss-like" it is the glossiest gloss there is. New cars aren't as shiny as a nice coat of Future.

    Also, in my experience, "flattening" Future doesn't work well. You can cover it with flat coats, but mixing in a flattening agent to try to make it dry flat either makes it turn white or splotchy. (I tried many ratios, none worked well or consistently)

    Huh. I mixed Future 50/50 with Vallejo Satin Varnish and sprayed it straight thru my airbrush on a vinyl figure today over top of some heavy Future sealing coats and it worked like a charm ti provide a less glossy but not satin finish. The straight Future sealed parts look like candy, and the half and half sprayed parts are just a knock less shiny to differentiate.

    For most of the things I paint at this point, I'll use three healthy coats of Future sprayed thru my AB as sealer, followed by whatever finish sealer I need (matte, satin, or just leave it shiny Future). I got sick of buying rattle can topcoats.

  12. 1/48 scale Gundam is tempting, but a bit extravagant... I don't own very much 1/48 stuff, so it isn't all that necessary. The 1/60 is great because there's alot of 1/60 mecha stuff out there, and the Jumbo Grade 1/35s are great because they can display alongside the wealth of 1/35 stuff out there, including people figures and tank models. 1/48's good for airplane modelers, but not really for mecha, besides the Yamato offerings.

  13. I'm looking forward to this and will definitely end up picking one up. I was never too big of a fan of my Revy VF-1J for some reason... it always seemed kinda boring, but a transformable figure as posable as that will be awesome. Super-articulated Gerwalk mode is going to be a hoot!

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