If you enjoyed this video or some of my other content please consider pressing the SUBSCRIBE button and hitting the BELL next to it so you get notified when I release a new video. You will find all the links and information you want in the expanded video description. If you have any questions or comments please leave them below. You can also see my behind the scenes video logs on my Patreon at www.patreon.com/worldofwayne
Wayne if you get time, look for Jenic on TH-cam, and watch his build of the same bike, I think you'll like it. And if you want to be exact the bike has fuel injection not carbies... and yes the starter motor is under the engine.
one thing that in my mind spoils this kit (I have it) is the screws are totally unrealistic. The real Duke has allen screws....supplied are phillips type. Very noticeable. So I have already had to by an aftermarket screw kit.
Feel your pain! Does my head in at work when I borrow a colleagues tools that are all imperial...... I'm too young to do imperial!!! I mean what the #¢§k is 7/16 in new money!! 🤣 🤣 🤣
thinking of starting an " I - Spy World of Wayne", where we score points for your classic sayings,, ( I.E.standby,) inuendos, inappropriate words ! ( I.E. nipple ), missing parts off and most importantly, when and if you injure yourself on camera, double points if on the live streams, triple for patreons.....
Check out the channel "splash baker model builder", he did the bike a couple of months ago. There are some errors in the manual and decal placement he shows. Figured this might help you some.
@@David_in_Thailand that shouldn't be necessary with a kit of this size and price. That exhaust should have been one complete metal piece. I say the same a about Tamiya 1:6 scale motorcycles too. Only in plastic, not metal.
@@2005portensie the degree of necessity is redundant, it's a kit, I will sand fill and paint it. That's part of the craft. I have done the same with Tamiya 1:6 scale. The level of realism is enhanced. Ducati exhaust systems are not one single piece, they have joints between multiple pieces.
@@David_in_Thailand Not longitudinally though. And yes I will sand and paint but that will happen over existing pre-coloured parts because of seams that don't exist on the real thing. (So pre-colouring is a waste of time on many parts))
@@ekspatriat absolutely they have longitudinal sections. If you're referring to longitudinal seams, well that's just part of the molding process necessitated by the compound curves. It's a kit and I'm a kit builder, not an assembler.
If you enjoyed this video or some of my other content please consider pressing the SUBSCRIBE button and hitting the BELL next to it so you get notified when I release a new video. You will find all the links and information you want in the expanded video description. If you have any questions or comments please leave them below. You can also see my behind the scenes video logs on my Patreon at www.patreon.com/worldofwayne
Like video
Leave it to Pocher. I could write a paragraph of superlatives for this engine, but to sum it up: absolutely spectacular! Great build.
Always love seeing these builds. Especially these massive ones.
Getting there Wayne.
Loving the build as all ways.
Stay safe all.
I enjoy your videos
Great build 👍
Wayne if you get time, look for Jenic on TH-cam, and watch his build of the same bike, I think you'll like it. And if you want to be exact the bike has fuel injection not carbies... and yes the starter motor is under the engine.
Superb!
one thing that in my mind spoils this kit (I have it) is the screws are totally unrealistic. The real Duke has allen screws....supplied are phillips type. Very noticeable. So I have already had to by an aftermarket screw kit.
Like video
I used to have a Honda interceptor 1000 great bike🏍️
Hi Wayne them parts are the throttle bodies for the fuel injection system ⛽
Ahhh thank you
Hi wayne thats one chunky engine
Hello where do you get the black valve or pipe?
And what size is that?
👍⭐🌟🌠🏍️🏍️🏍️🇮🇹🇮🇹🇮🇹
Hewo wayne
Great Video Wayne. I think you cut a pipe too short lol you said 86cm instead of 86mm lol
I’m always doing that lol
Also if I remember there was one pipe at 95cm!!🤣 🤣
@@RichN22 lol. Yer me and metric system have been having words lol
Feel your pain! Does my head in at work when I borrow a colleagues tools that are all imperial...... I'm too young to do imperial!!! I mean what the #¢§k is 7/16 in new money!! 🤣 🤣 🤣
thinking of starting an " I - Spy World of Wayne", where we score points for your classic sayings,, ( I.E.standby,) inuendos, inappropriate words ! ( I.E. nipple ), missing parts off and most importantly, when and if you injure yourself on camera, double points if on the live streams, triple for patreons.....
Lol.
👍👍👍👏👏👏
Check out the channel "splash baker model builder", he did the bike a couple of months ago. There are some errors in the manual and decal placement he shows. Figured this might help you some.
Leave it to Wayne, on how to use the word 'nipple' properly without giggling every few seconds.
Believe me. Inside I’m dying lol
You'd think with a bike that big, and that detailed that the exhaust would be a complete unit without any unsightly seams.
I would be filling sanding and painting all of the parts on a build like this.
@@David_in_Thailand that shouldn't be necessary with a kit of this size and price. That exhaust should have been one complete metal piece. I say the same a about Tamiya 1:6 scale motorcycles too. Only in plastic, not metal.
@@2005portensie the degree of necessity is redundant, it's a kit, I will sand fill and paint it. That's part of the craft. I have done the same with Tamiya 1:6 scale. The level of realism is enhanced. Ducati exhaust systems are not one single piece, they have joints between multiple pieces.
@@David_in_Thailand Not longitudinally though. And yes I will sand and paint but that will happen over existing pre-coloured parts because of seams that don't exist on the real thing. (So pre-colouring is a waste of time on many parts))
@@ekspatriat absolutely they have longitudinal sections. If you're referring to longitudinal seams, well that's just part of the molding process necessitated by the compound curves. It's a kit and I'm a kit builder, not an assembler.