Dude, that looks freaken sweet! In some of those shots it looks like the real car is sitting in your driveway lol
How long did it take you to assemble and paint?
Chris
Well, I had to special order the model from my local hobby shop. After a few weeks, it came in and I brought it home, and after inspection, it had a lot of defects I couldn't accept, especially at the nose of the car, where the sprue of the casting must have been, and there was 1/16 of an inch deep metal missing and it was painted over, so I brought it back to show them. They told me to hang on to it while the replacement was being shipped. Then that one came in, and even IT had paint defects, only different paint defects. I swapped out different parts of the two kits to have the best kit possible. Honestly, the two kits weren't painted EXACTLY the same color red. One was slightly brighter than the other, but it's hardly noticeable. For example, at least one of the doors is different. I used polishing compound, and rubbed out all of the body pieces by hand, and then used finer polishes and glazes, and finally put a few coats of wax on it before assembly. The polishing/waxing probably took 7 hours. Most of the time spent on the model was research, as in looking at books, magazines, and going to Newport Imports to see the cars in person, to know how to paint it right. I selected the red carpet with black floor mats and black dash color scheme for the interior, preserving the creme colored seats, which were molded in color. I painted the metal headrest posts and other parts chrome silver for detail. The doorjamb area is painted flat black, like on the real car, whereas of course it was painted gloss red along with the rest of the body. It gives the car much more realism when you have the doors open that way. ( I misplaced the key, lol, so I could not take pics of the jambs.
) I honestly cannot recall how many cumulative hours it took me, but between working and everything else, it was about 7 weeks.
It comes with little keys that unlock the doors, by the way. The locking mechanism is simple, so once you close the doors, they lock automatically, and you need the key to open them again.
All of the engine parts were molded in color, as the whole kit was meant to just be assembled and thus finished. The plastic color didn't look quite right, so I painted everything. I used aluminum paint for the block, red for the head covers, a different silver for the exhaust, brass, chrome silver, or aluminum for the fasteners, and maybe some copper as well. The tube frame piece that surrounds the engine compartment with the little tank on it was all molded in one piece, so I first masked off the tank, and then sprayed the frame flat black, and after a few days, I masked off the frame, and painted the tank gloss black, being careful to mask off the little tabs of the tank that mount to the frame perfectly, so it looks like they are two pieces and the paint margins are perfect. I painted the cap silver(which was separate), painted the fasteners, and applied the decal, and I was done. I am very proud of that part of the car. I spray painted the cap, by the way, as I did with even the smallest parts of the model, except for the little nuts and bolts, which I used a brush on.
The headlights go up, too, but I forgot to raise them for the pics. They stay up by themselves, but the bonnet and engine cover do not. They must be held or propped up. The body is die cast, which is quite heavy, and any load bearing plastic parts are fiber reinforced plastic. Of course, I painted all of the suspension parts with perfect detail as well, even though they cannot be seen in the pics. I painted the brake rotors steel, ect. The car weighs quite a bit.
I bought this when these kits first came out, when they were all coupes, and all painted red, in 1988. I built this in 1988, before all of the upgraded parts were made available aftermarket. Now you can get metal engines, brake rotors, and other parts, however, I'm pleased enough with how this turned out that I see no need to upgrade, although an upgraded engine would be nice. The engine always looked a little toylike to me. Later, they came out with a Spyder, which was available in black, white, or red. I believe the coupe may also have been available in all three colors, as I have seen a black coupe.