They do work well. You could technically speaking throw portions of the model at a wall or drop and it will still stay together. Although the space kitty cat would still cut it to ribbons!Awesome work, mate! The reinforcements should work nicely.
Thanks MIJOB!Thats com.ing out great I like your work arounds.
Thanks Rhaven! The next part is joining all the parts together and then the struts. Hope after assembling everything they line up..This is coming together nicely!
@zathros the tabs are actual strips that you glue inside the model itself
If you look at the template there are strips that are glued inside the part, looks like tabs but you get the look of a strip joint.Yes, you have developed a great technique. You may want to explain it to some, who may not have caught what you did. You know many tab models don't come out as nice as what you are doing.![]()
If you look at the template there are strips that are glued inside the part, looks like tabs but you get the look of a strip joint.
Wait that sounded wrong....
Thanks paper master!One of the better jobs using tabs, that I've seen. I'm still against them, but if you're (in general) going to use tabs, this is the way to do it.![]()
A lot of Russian, Polish, and JP models seem to use the separated strip tab technique in the design of their models - re joining by strip. Per your recommendation a long long time ago (in a galaxy far far away) I separate the tabs from the template, then re-glue underneath the template to make the outer surface a bit smoother, then join the various templates together.Yes, you have developed a great technique. You may want to explain it to some, who may not have caught what you did. You know many tab models don't come out as nice as what you are doing.![]()
Argghhhh!Actually there should have been a square gate in the bottom, where Alan is pushed in to the cockpit, sitting on the couch...
Thanks Rhaven!This is coming together nicely!