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Phyrox

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Posts posted by Phyrox

  1. On 4/15/2023 at 4:21 AM, MKT said:

    Clearer pics of the Bulldog Tread from Genesis Breakers:

    /snip

    /snip

     

    Man, I wouldn't have thought it would be so easy to ruin one of my favorite mecha designs, but...there it is.  The change in the wings completely change the feel of armo-bomber mode, and the oversized claws and mustachioed face just kill armo-soldier for me.  I loved the more drastic redesign we saw years back, but this...no thanks.
    Looks like that bad robotech fan-fiction stuff from the late 1990s internet sites

  2. That Hambrabi is terrible.  I guess I'm getting too old but the design looks overly busy but to no good effect.  It's just a jumble of shapes that just don't gel into anything.  I can't even tell which end is supposed to be the front.
    Not a huge fan of the original Hambrabi from Zeta, but this thing really makes me nostalgic for the designs of that era, where not everything looked like spikey mess.

  3. Wow, that re-styled battlepod is pretty blatant in its, eh...borrowing?
    Whether they wrote in-universe justifications or not, that's not a good look.
    Between that and the rather poor art* we've seen here that's going into the latest RPG...makes me nostalgic for what Palladium art was, warts and all.

    *- I know some people here have paid for commissioned art from this Kickstarter, and I'm happy that they're finally seeing the scenes in their head drawn out at long last.  I don't mean to disparage that.

  4. Recently re-watched the original series, and I still enjoy it after all these years and who knows how many watches later...I'm thinking of finally taking the plunge and reading the manga.

    But, uh...what's up with the availability?  Anyone know where one could get the series for a reasonable price?
    For the "3-in-1" consolidated version, Vol. 1, 4, and 5 I can pick up for $20/each.  Vol. 2 and 3 are no where to be found.  I've seen complete sets for $300+ but that's insane.

    So...
    1) what gives with the rarity of those volumes?
    2) anyone know where to find the manga series?

  5. Anyone have any insider info on what's up with the MEPTOYS invid scout and shocktrooper?
    It was due to ship in December, then I gather there was a problem with the pre-production proofs that had to be addressed...but I ain't heard nothing.
    No email, nothing on their website, nothing on Facebook...
    I emailed them last week asking for an update, but haven't gotten any response.

    I'm wondering if I should contact my c.c. company for a chargeback?

  6. Got a model-finding query for the experts here.
    Does anyone have any idea where one might find non-blind purchase options for the old (series 1) Gundam Mini Kit Collections?  I'm really trying to get the Ra Cailum kit, but everything on Ebay was blind buy, and didn't see a thing on Y!Japan...
    I figure someone here might have a lead I hadn't thought about.

    This box:
    box.jpg.12aa38d99fdf12105a8c07fa81109c83.jpg

    with this kit:
    kit.jpg.6e564e6bc6208aedc26cc979931d381a.jpg

     

    Appreciate any help...I'm close to buying a set of 12 boxes in the hopes of getting one...and that's just stupid.

  7. Maybe one of you car collectors can point me in the right direction for finding obscure/OOP subjects.

    I have (or, had, pre-covid WFH) a nice themed desk display going with 1/43 pre-war race cars.
    I really want a 1927 Napier-Campbell Bluebird, but the only thing I can find on the internet is that one was made a while ago, but I can't find any for sale, and don't know where to look for 'em (aside from eBay).

    So far I've got:

    Mercedes W125 - Grand Prix racing
    Bugatti 57G - Le Mans
    Alfa Romeo 8C 2900 MM - Road racing (mille miglia)
    Sunbeam 1000hp - Land Speed Record
    Bentley Speed Six - Illegal road racing (blue train)
    Mercedes W125 w/twin wheels - Hill climbs (grossglockner)

    I'd like to add/swap in the 1927 Napier Campbell (which briefly held the land speed record), but have pretty much given up on finding one.  Any advice?
    I wouldn't mind picking up an ERA or Delage to represent voiturette racing if anyone knows if those exist in 1/43?
    Ooh, ooh, and a front-wheel drive Miller for pre-war Indy racing would be perfect...

  8. I picked up one of those 3rd party mount sets that has it up at an oblique angle and set it on top of a bookshelf for a while.

    Then I took it apart and gave it to my cousin's kids because I don't love the Falcon enough for the space it took up.
    Well, that and the non-locking roof panels were a pain in the ass with the display angle.  A slight bump and they shifted out of alignment.

  9. Hey all- I know this isn't TV related, but I was hoping for some fan input:

    Best estimate - what do you think the height of the S-Gundam's head is, minus the V-fins and antennae?

    I'm working on a new drawing and can't find any specific data, but this info would really help with sizes and perspective.

    Do you trust the MG instructions? If so we can get a pretty good estimate:

    If 347 pixels is equal to 21.73m (head height), then 39 pixels is equal to about 2.4m

    post-659-0-44797700-1458716402_thumb.gif

  10. That's a laugh. The Yamato's range finders and gun directors were old even by first world war standards. The fact that the IJN didn't take radar as a tool of war very seriously at all really hurt them. The American ships on the other hand integrated radar range finding very early on making their guns deadly accurate.

    I was really talking about the "built to walk up to its opponent and just start swinging with nothing but destructive might and some luck" comment, which hadn't been true of major naval vessels for 30 years prior to the Yamato's launching.

    The Japanese range finders and gunnery direction computers (as they were known then) were leaps beyond WWI standards, as were those of all the world's major navies. There had been major advances in gunnery systems and directors in the decade before the Great War, and they continued up to the Second. The lack of quality radar equipment in the IJN is well known, but the Yamato's equipment was as good as could be expected given that limitation. For the early 1940s the Yamato had as high tech a suite of equipment as could be expected from a naval vessel, with that one exception.

    I'll admit, most of my knowledge of the ins and outs of 20th century naval gunnery technology and development comes from Friedman's book on the subject, but even without that I've never read anything that would even suggest "old by first world war standards" is anything like accurate. Certainly, the basic concepts underlying most of the directors in service in the Second World War were already being used in British systems of the Great War, but all major navies had made significant progress on the systems in the intervening years.

    Which is all just to say, yes, they were very advanced pieces of equipment for their day.

  11. Granted, the sheer technological marvels of modern warships eclipse the Yamato and it's like, but it's the primitive, comparatively barbaric nature of the Yamato that I find impressive. A modern warship like an aircraft carrier sends out technology to precisely attack it's opponents. But the Yamato was built to walk up to its opponent and just start swinging with nothing but destructive might and some luck to win the battle. I find that fascinating in the Yamato, as well as other war machines from the past...

    You should read up on the state of gunnery direction on late battleships. The technology aboard the Yamato was as cutting edge as a supercarrier, for its day.

  12. In sexy airplane news. A replica of the second sexiest airplane to ever exist, right behind the YF-23, flew for the first time, 75 years after the original was built. The Bugatti 100p

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8yZdrvgV4qE

    Wow, I'm surprised this project has made such progress. Last I read the airframe was complete but the next step seemed more like a leap.

    A really beautiful aircraft, and I'm impressed such an ambitious private enterprise seems to be on the road to success.

    Not my favorite inter-war racer*, but certainly an interesting lost opportunity.

    *-full disclosure, inter-war race planes are one of my favorite topics.

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