22 July 1999:
I began
by cutting the roof. I had a top from the Pontiac kit and it seemed to
fit fine. The back was also cut to make a blending rounded profile with
the back of the roof part.
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A
styrene strip was glued to make the
base for the rounded back. |
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The
roof's top was too wide for the
car, so I cut it at a profile so that the B-post would be parallel with
the A-post when looked from the front. |
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I
glued the roof on, then applied automotive
polyester putty for fill-ins. |
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I
thought of lowering the front profile,
so I cut the front grille housing and glued it as shown. I made sure
that
the hood did not interfere with the air filter. I also gave a curved
profile
longitudinally to the hood, since it was originally straight and
tilting
it down at the front as it was resulted in a broken line at the front
of
the cowl. I gave a plastic deformation to the hood by applying stress
with
my hands. |
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The
front grille/bumper combination
would be used as the front grille/spoiler unit. I cut the bottom part
of
the grille, and narrowed the bumper so that it would blend with the
front
wheelarches. |
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I
cut out the full grille pattern and
made a hollow area, so that I could put a screen afterwards for
realistic
looks. |
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This
is a close-up of the blending
of the grille housing with the headlamp recess. |
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I
applied automotive polyester putty
at the front for filling-in. |
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I
decided to widen the fenders. I cut
styrene strips for the top of the extensions and glued them. Then I cut
along the fender waist line and split it at the very top of the
wheelarches.
I deformed the fenders outwards with my hands and fixed the parts with
glue. |
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Then,
I applied polyester putty again
to the front fenders. |
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25 July 1999:
The same was done with the rear fenders. |
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I
sanded the back round, and opened
the recesses for the rear lamps. I drilled 1.5 mm diameter holes side
by
side, then cut the material out with Dremel and finally filed the
surfaces.
This was a demanding operation, because the profile was full of putty,
which was very ready to break in chips if handled improperly. |
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06 August 1999:
At the front, I sanded the putty down
and drilled the holes for the front signal lamps. |
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I
cut the door top profiles from styrene
strip, and glued them in place. You also see the rear fenders at the
sanding
stage. |
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The
drip rails were cut from thin sheet
styrene and glued on the body. |
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And the first primer coat. The car
required lots of more putty and sanding. |
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16 August 1999:
The kit's underhood internal panels
were just disgusting as you see in the lower right pic. The body just
did
not have them, and only the wheel wells served(!) for the purpose. I
duplicated
the panels of a 67 Mustang kit out of resin and glued them into
place. |
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22 August 1999:
I then cut away the wheel wells. |
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24 August 1999:
The rear quarter light window gaps
would serve as a grille. The grilles were made from the teeth of a
comb........ |
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.......and
glued with 5-minute epoxy
into place. |
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......................
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...........
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