I can see a lot of gaps on the daban but are only visible up close. Iv'e had a fair share with them by buying a PG Strike Rouge and it was a nightmare to build. So many flesh plastics around parts, uneven fits, and falling armors. And after just fidling with it at the same day I finished building it, the rod on the knee broke and both of them lmao. So if you are considering buying Daban kits, build it, pose it, and never touch it again lol. Edit: The joint that connects the body to the waist also broke when it fell of the shelf when I accidentally nudged it while I was cleaning. RIP
How they get the molds and specialized injection production equipment. I thought was Bandai patent and only custom made their factory. Wait is there a Hollywood script and movie about corporate sabotage and spying here grab from Bandai head north to China all the way to Dban the bizzaro Gundam world? If Daban does not have the exact patented equipments and mold tech then I take it the main difference woukd ne in the plastics quality and stability over all. Why some have some small run iffs or swelling like issues giving us the need to pick up a hammer for what with Bandai is a simple snap as designed. Am I anywhere close here?
@@EddieTHead2266 You are quite misinformed, there's no "mold tech". If you're interested, all you need is: 1. an appropriate 3D scanner 2. take scans of uncut plastics 3. have random manufacturer produce mold for you from scans (most costly) 4. pick your desired plastic colour, finish & quantity 5. select delivery address
wish you had compared them with words
Right?
The panel gap tolerances are much better on the Bandai, as they should be for 3x the price.
my initial plan for this is to buy the bandai clear armor part and slap it on the daban frame, but i have yet to find it at decent price.
@@justgamesandtoys that's a good idea too, but there also be compability issues, but nothing that will take much work.
You can engrave it by yourself if you are good modeller.
I can see a lot of gaps on the daban but are only visible up close. Iv'e had a fair share with them by buying a PG Strike Rouge and it was a nightmare to build. So many flesh plastics around parts, uneven fits, and falling armors. And after just fidling with it at the same day I finished building it, the rod on the knee broke and both of them lmao. So if you are considering buying Daban kits, build it, pose it, and never touch it again lol.
Edit: The joint that connects the body to the waist also broke when it fell of the shelf when I accidentally nudged it while I was cleaning. RIP
You aelling for parts?
Imagine you put them in the same state for an honest comparison. Panel lines and decals on both.
How about the price difference sir
welp, the bootleg costs 1/3 of the original.
Noice🙃
Isn't it just a recast? therefore basically no difference
yes
How they get the molds and specialized injection production equipment. I thought was Bandai patent and only custom made their factory. Wait is there a Hollywood script and movie about corporate sabotage and spying here grab from Bandai head north to China all the way to Dban the bizzaro Gundam world?
If Daban does not have the exact patented equipments and mold tech then I take it the main difference woukd ne in the plastics quality and stability over all. Why some have some small run iffs or swelling like issues giving us the need to pick up a hammer for what with Bandai is a simple snap as designed.
Am I anywhere close here?
@@EddieTHead2266 You are quite misinformed, there's no "mold tech".
If you're interested, all you need is:
1. an appropriate 3D scanner
2. take scans of uncut plastics
3. have random manufacturer produce mold for you from scans (most costly)
4. pick your desired plastic colour, finish & quantity
5. select delivery address
look same 👍👍