My recent experiences showed that if I let my bench go to cool, it freezes. So there I am again, with another build!
But before any word about the Aoshima kit, do you remember this one?


Well, what goes 'round, turns 'round. I am back to it from a different angle. The original model has suffered a cruel fate. Somebody torn it to pieces, but my lady friend still keeps it. I think 2 years have passed since this happened, and she keeps begging of me on every encounter to fix it back for her - offering to pay for repairs. I can't take the offer, since it was my gift for her in the first place. I kept postponing the job until last time I've seen her. I explained her that is easier to build one anew than to fix the old one. She agreed, even when she was told that the colours will be different (see the original story in the features section). By the time the kit reached my bench, I had a change of heart and I asked myself what sense will make to gift a orange Beetle owner with a 2-tone blue Beetle. Although I just completed a candy orange truck, I decided to take the risk and rather be accused of lack of inspiration than to give the lady the wrong gift.
As it happens, yesterday I have run into this picture:
Not related to the Beetle by any means, but the visual effect of the colour scheme totally tipped the balance. My Cabrio is going to be orange, imagination working or not!
A new curse stuck apparently on me: this will make the fourth model in a row designed initially to be motorized. Again gaps on the bottom plate and all that - but - hey! Look an orange Cabrio! (she doesn't know yet I changed my plans and I will keep is as a surprise).
Body is one piece, very fine and close to scale plastic, filigran detail. Just look how delicate (and dangerous) are these lateral window frames!
You really have to strain your eyes to find any flash on the parts. Minor bonus, the battery lid has some detail on it (see that Yodel and Tamiya?)
If the Japanese are cheap with the interior details, they aren't bad at all at molding quality. This kit originates back in 1972! See that MPC, right? Maybe AMT and other flash manufacturers.
Chromed oil pan is not an European manufacturer business, so off it goes. The chrome on the other parts looks not so gleamy - I might keep it:
Even on the chromed parts the detail is superb and there are no seam lines:
Clear pats, again, totally reasonable as thickness and clarity, and there are no scratches:
That was for tonight - knowing the Japanese precision manufacturing, I am expecting another "blitz" (if another Gabriel stupid painting experiment doesn't ruin it all that is).
Gabriel
