Feb.
15, 2004:
I applied
the yellow stripes around the car, those stripes indicated that the car
was a Dolmus. The taxis had a black and white checkered
stripe all
around to make distinguishing easy. The stripes were cut from a sticker
sheet.
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I
then applied the BMF over the drip rails and rear. |
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I
manufactured column shift lever and signal stalk from pins. |
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I
applied "vinyl" covering at the rear part of the floor too, and made a
test-fit. |
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I
had to manufacture door handles. I found a suitable part on the part
tree
of 64 Mustang, and I made a mold for copying and produced two sets from
resin. |
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This
is a Philips car record player. They played 45 rpm records, and were
popular
by that time. I manufactured the body from styrene, prepared the record
on the computer and printed it, then glued the record on a thin brass
sheet
to protect from accidental folding. The red spot is Philips emblem, I
later
corrected its edges to look more like the emblem. |
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I
glued the record player in place, also manufactured the piece of cloth
that was put on the dashboard to put coins on. The cloth is made from
tissue
paper, spray painted yellow and twofolded. I stuck the folds on to each
other and the cloth to the dashboard by double-side sticker band. |
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Feb.
17, 2004:
I manufactured
the inside door lock handles from styrene and painted them chrome
silver.
(in fact, couldn't succeed in BMF..)
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I
manufactured the armrests from styrene too, and painted them clear blue
glass paint. The set of 4 is ready now, but only 3 will be used because
there will be no armrest and handle on the rear left door... |
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I
then manufactured the window crank arms for the front doors from pins
and
styrene tubing. Fixed them with CA glue, then painted chrome silver
with
black knobs. |
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Here
is the installation of the front left door. |
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Now
to the headlights. I will first fabricate the reflectors.
1)
I cut some round piece from 0.2 mm aluminum foil.
2)
I pressed the foil to an umbrella shape with the rounded tip of a screw
(just hadn't a handy sized steel rod) in a wooden female.
3)
I trimmed the end of the umbrella on the screw to a flat end.
4)
I pressed the reflector through the headlamp hole in the grille. Then
pulled
the male back. The reflector stayed in place.
To
give you an idea, the diameter of the headlamp hole is 6mm, and the
screw
was a M6, which I turned down to 5.5mm dia so that the foil could be
drawn
between them without too much gripping.
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Here
is the finished left side. I applied clear parts cement at the back
sides
of the reflectors to hold them in place. |
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The
finished front grille with the headlamp lenses in place.
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Below
are the details of the front licence plate. I printed it on the
computer
and by double-sided adhesive sheet, I stuck it on 0.2 mm aluminum foil.
Then I gave it some aging bends here and there. |
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Feb.
23, 2004:
I painted
the rear inner panels clear blue glass paint plus clear varnish for the
nylon looks too.
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For
the headliner, I cut out a piece from a corrugated foam sheet and
painted
flat white. |
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I
manufactured a primary accessory, the screwdriver.
The
drivers had that "handy" convention to keep one just near the quarter
window,
for immediate access to the carb or for "persuasion" in case of
conflicts
with other drivers...
I turned
the grab handle from clear parts tree and stuck a steel pin into it
with
CA glue, then painted with clear yellow.
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Feb.
27, 2004:
I installed
the door trim panels and positioned the screwdriver at its most common
place...
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I
painted the "user instruction" for the rear door. |
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I
manufactured the route panel. It is computer-generated, printed on
paper
and sprayed 3 clear coats for plexiglass appearance. The bar is made of
brass strip cut from a sheet. |
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This
"Masallah" means something like "be praised". This accessory is hung on
rear view mirrors and in real, manufactured from tiny beads. Well, for
1/25 the way I could figure out was to scribe lines on thin acetate and
paint with blue glass paint. The double-sided expression is printed on
paper and glued to two acetate pieces. |
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I
glued the Masallah on the mirror with epoxy glue and then the whole
thing
to the roof. |
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