This is a life saver, I was worried I was going go have to sand my entire really well detailed kit with raised panel lines to the bone and rescribe it all, thank you so much for what I assume will be a massive money and time saver!
THANK YOU!!! Wow was this ever helpful and surprisingly simple. I tried it last night on some ordinance and worked like a charm. Can't believe how many years this has eluded me! Recessed panel lines, sure no problem , but raised has always given me problems....until now (and your video). Thank you for taking the time to make and post this video. Super helpful and much appreciated!
Although I have many old monogram kits, I have refrained from building them because I didn't want to destroy them, now that I see it done there is a light at the end of the tunnel! Thankyou this was extremely helpful!!!!
This is great! I was worried I was going to have to sand the rest down and rescribe them as recessed lines. This will be so much easier and less likely to become a mess.
Thank you so much for this tip. I'm working on an old revell a-10 kit and I had no idea what to do with these raised lines until I saw your lesson. Thanks again.
Really useful video. Don’t come across many raised panel lines in my stash, but I’ll know what to do when I need to replace a surface detail I’ve sanded away. 👍👍
Good tutorial, thank you. Can you also give some advice on how to weather kits with raised panel lines? Apart from pre-shading, I was wondering if the same panel line washes can be used as for engraved ones. Would the capillary action work in the corners between the lines and the surface and give a comparable effect? I am about to start the Monogram A-26 and I am hesitant about how to tackle this topic.
Ive worked on real C-130s, and lots of other Big aircraft and I can tell you that it has no panel lines sticking up off the skin surface, especially at right angles to the airflow. And any panel lines are visible only within 10/20 feet, which is only a couple of inches in 1/72nd scale. Being a modeler and a real aircraft tech is making me pretty picky about real scale look. The only actual way to delineate panels is by painting the individual panels with seperate applications. Even engraved lines are usually way too large for the scales we model.
This is a life saver, I was worried I was going go have to sand my entire really well detailed kit with raised panel lines to the bone and rescribe it all, thank you so much for what I assume will be a massive money and time saver!
Great to hear!
THANK YOU!!! Wow was this ever helpful and surprisingly simple. I tried it last night on some ordinance and worked like a charm. Can't believe how many years this has eluded me! Recessed panel lines, sure no problem , but raised has always given me problems....until now (and your video). Thank you for taking the time to make and post this video. Super helpful and much appreciated!
Although I have many old monogram kits, I have refrained from building them because I didn't want to destroy them, now that I see it done there is a light at the end of the tunnel! Thankyou this was extremely helpful!!!!
This is great! I was worried I was going to have to sand the rest down and rescribe them as recessed lines. This will be so much easier and less likely to become a mess.
Thank you so much for this tip. I'm working on an old revell a-10 kit and I had no idea what to do with these raised lines until I saw your lesson. Thanks again.
Glad it was helpful!
Awesome tutorial! I’m always hesitant to build kits with raised panel lines. I will definitely try this technique.
Glad it was helpful!
Really useful video. Don’t come across many raised panel lines in my stash, but I’ll know what to do when I need to replace a surface detail I’ve sanded away. 👍👍
Thank you very much for this tutorial. Used to restore raised panel lines on an old Matchbox kit.
Glad it helped
Great tutorial ! Thank You ! Hope you have a great/safe week , Cheers, Tony
Thanks 👍
Thank you for a very informative tutorial. Would like to see more of you! Judy in Nova Scotia, Canada
Great video! Wish I had this info when I worked on the 1/48 monogram tomcat. Lost so much surface detail (such as their was)
Good tutorial, thank you. Can you also give some advice on how to weather kits with raised panel lines?
Apart from pre-shading, I was wondering if the same panel line washes can be used as for engraved ones. Would the capillary action work in the corners between the lines and the surface and give a comparable effect?
I am about to start the Monogram A-26 and I am hesitant about how to tackle this topic.
thanx thats great...i may start my old italeri ac 130a kit and do it justice now...not just leave the panel lines flat after sanding ;)
Glad it helped
Great tutorial! Thank you! 👍
Glad it was helpful!
Oh my god a foreigner! What happened Bobby? Only kidding! Good stuff.
Wow.......Thank you so much sir!!!!
Most welcome!
@@genessismodels I am 51 and starting...so videos really help !!!
Great video thanks.
You're welcome!
Ive worked on real C-130s, and lots of other Big aircraft and I can tell you that it has no panel lines sticking up off the skin surface, especially at right angles to the airflow. And any panel lines are visible only within 10/20 feet, which is only a couple of inches in 1/72nd scale. Being a modeler and a real aircraft tech is making me pretty picky about real scale look. The only actual way to delineate panels is by painting the individual panels with seperate applications. Even engraved lines are usually way too large for the scales we model.
Great video
What's a "pannaline" please.
Its where two panels meet, theres a crack. Like around the door of a car.
@@pettomatro Sorry. I thought you were talking about something other than 'Panel lines'.
No sound on right channel.
Who the hell is this guy?
Great content. Horrible audio.