Dragon JSU-122S/152 (Kit 6047) Build
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January 23, 2013Filled the sponsons with plastic sheet.2
January 23, 2013Raised the lower hull for accuracy and track clearance.3
January 23, 2013Used plastic strip and sheet to raise the hull.4
January 23, 2013Opening the air intakes for photo-etched screens. I didn't notice the exquisite detail until I started grinding it off.5
January 23, 2013I was able to make it harder to open the air intakes by doing the sponson first. Should have opened the holes first. Anyway, the screens for the Tamiya kit are the same width, but about a millimeter shorter in length. Looks like I can make it work.6
January 24, 2013Internal baffles made with plastic sheet.7
January 25, 2013Intake baffles done.8
January 25, 2013Axles and wire handrails on.9
January 26, 2013Test fitting the gun and mantlet.10
January 27, 2013Deepened the panel lines on the back plate, added a handle on and a rain guard over the large access door, and used a brass rod for the hinge bar.11
January 27, 2013Attached the main sprockets. They can spin freely to aid in track placement later.12
January 27, 2013Attaching the lower and upper hulls.13
January 27, 2013The seams are sealed, sanded, and textured (with super glue and cornstarch slurry dabbed on with a bamboo skewer). I use silver paint to help me see any gaps.14
January 28, 2013Starting the detail work.15
January 29, 2013Headlight and horn using Voyager photo-etch for Tamiya16
January 29, 2013The horn required some slicing and splicing to use the photo-etch. The "bell" is drilled out.17
January 29, 2013Top hatches required some work to be flat bottomed, not round.18
February 6, 2013Slowly adding bits and pieces from the Voyager photo-etch. Remember, that photo-etch is for the Tamiya JSU-152.19
February 6, 2013The grills and wire bits.20
February 6, 201321
February 6, 2013Glued the brackets onto the fuel tanks and let them dry over-night. Notice how the straps end before they reach the brackets.22
February 6, 2013I cut strips from sheet styrene to extend the holding straps to the brackets. Super glue, with a little corn starch, filled the gap. Then all was sanded smooth.23
February 6, 2013Using super glue allowed the process to go quickly. Extended both the front and back straps down to the brackets.24
February 6, 2013Applied silver paint (enamel) to help me see seams or gaps.25
February 6, 2013Added "Grandt Line" bolts (which are used to tighten the straps on the real machine).26
February 6, 2013Attached the tanks to the hull.27
February 7, 2013Spare tracks "welded" on the front with Super-glue and cornstarch slurry.28
February 8, 2013Primed with Tamiya white liquid surface primer.29
February 8, 201330
February 8, 201331
February 8, 201332
February 8, 201333
February 10, 2013Base coat of Model Master Acryl Medium Green34
February 10, 2013Wetted the front area and applied table salt at random to scrape off later. Painted front with Model Master Acryl Flat White35
February 10, 2013Scraped off the salt and misted the green areas with Model Master Acryl Russian Armor Green to darken and cover any white over spray.36
February 11, 2013Applied decals over a gloss coat. The word is "VICTORY!"37
February 12, 2013Artist oil paint and mineral spirit wash.38
February 12, 2013Ugly. Hope this works...39
February 12, 2013Pin wash in some places, general wash in others. Needs to be "cleaned-up" after it drys. I will wipe the excess off with mineral spirits. I hope....40
February 12, 2013The wash cleaned-up. I used a foam pad and Tamiya cotton swabs with mineral spirits to wipe away the excess wash.41
February 12, 2013Completed the first dry brushing to bring out the highlights.42
February 12, 2013More dry brushing....43
February 12, 2013Finished the stowage and detail painting44
February 12, 2013Spare tracks painted45
February 12, 2013More stowage46
February 14, 2013After applying green filter, brown pastel filter, and mud layer (real mud!)47
February 14, 2013Ready for tracks!48
February 14, 201349
February 16, 2013The tracks seem pretty nice, but it took about six hours to clean them up!50
February 16, 2013The tracks are fitted and glued together.51
February 16, 2013After a couple of hours of glue drying, I paint and weather the tracks52
February 16, 2013Made them a dusty rust color, with highlights of rubbed metal (dry brushing)53
February 16, 2013Even though the tracks are glued and dry, a little heat from a hair dryer softens the bond. Very carefully, the tracks can be threaded onto the vehicle.54
February 16, 2013The sprockets have to be constructed so they can spin freely, or this method would be very difficult. The rest of the wheels have been glued in place, but if they could turn, it wouldn't hurt.55
February 16, 2013Using little blasts of heat and cotton swabs allows me to mold the tracks in place as I want them.56
February 16, 2013In a few minutes, the glue bond tightens, and you're done! I started with 89 links per side, but after wrapping around, and sagging the track, the connection point was at 83 links. I always try to connect on the bottom.57
February 16, 2013I don't think you could use this method if the lower hull wasn't modified (raised), like I did at the beginning of this project. There would be too little clearance to thread things through!58
February 16, 2013Next steps are touch-up paint and mud on the tracks and sprockets. Almost done!59
February 16, 2013Finished!
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17 February 2025, 16:45 -