You should look into molding casting new windshields. You could just Bondo the windshield to a desired finish and that would be your mold pattern. Just pour some silicone and you'll have a mold that you can shoot a variety of translucent resins into.
I did notice there was a crack that separated the top of the car from the front driver side pillar. It's noticeable in the video but it doesn't seem like it's a problem since the car isn't going to be for playing, just show. But if you noticed that, did you want to try and fix that or anything or leave it as is?
Another very useful and well-presented instructional video! I wish I thought of the silver Sharpie before buying a metallic paint pen. If you haven't already, an instructional on how to replace cracked / broken glazing using hard clear packaging plastic and heating it to form windows would be much appreciated. Thanks!
That’s a really neat car and you did a great job customizing it. I believe it’s a 1965 Galaxie judging by the grille and taillights. I have a full size 1966 Galaxie 500 and it’s got 200,000 miles on it and still running fine. I drove her everyday for about 10 years and she never let me down.
I’m 57, my parents started buying me those Matchbox toy cars since like ‘67, ‘68 when I was kindergarten. My distant memory keeps telling me that there were a couple of my favorites would still be somewhere in my old house for decades. Isn’t it crazy! This memory just can’t go away along with time. Here to share with u guys, I’ll The Ùrrr is the internet internet eee😂😂❤❤ internet e ew was seeds add as as B as
Tom Pulford ...I grew up in the U.S. in the 70’s. There were always 2 schools..., Matchbox kids and Hot Wheels kids. I was in the minority as a Matchbox kid. I just liked the look and feel better.
mercoid So was i loved matchbox cars think he could've done a way better job, did nothing to the interior not even the driver, wheels nothing. Why do so many customizers shyt on matchbox cars?
Agreed with the exception of the crude and usually undersized wheels/tires. The horribly oversized and white "trailer hitches" don't help either. As many others have said, I too think that Hot Wheels were more about custom rods and fantasy. 👍
Hi Kevin A Creedon my name is bradley absalom and i totally agree with your statement because if the door handle is metal then you can use a silver sharpie to make it look like metal
@baremetalHW - nice - thanks for detailing the chrome bits. Simple transformation from one "authori-tay" vehicle to another. That model was actually used by the U.S. Army. How to fix a windshield crack? Here is a method I like but nobody else does because it takes a while. Wash the clear plastic (whatever hue) in soap and water and dry. Carefully tape (painter's tape) right next to the edges of the crack - on the outside of the crack so that glue won't go anywhere but the crack. Since I don't have a "studio" or "workshop" I use Krazyglue (Dollar Tree) thwipp right from one end of the crack to the other and let harden for a minute. Remove tape and sand and polish. The crack won't be invisible but structurally it is solid. Not that it matters. I haven't seen my Corgi collection since 1968 however this method of window crack repair is a universal fix. Aloha.
Just an idea you can try, it worked on actual glass for me but never tried on plastic, if the crack is all the way through the other side, I used auto clear coat applied on the crack and with a suction cup or anything you can, create a bit of vacuum on the opposite side to make it leak in the crack, let dry and polish, takes a bit of practice but if done right the crack should completely vanish or very close, not sure how better to explain this without showing but I think you got the idea,please let me know if or when you tried it and what results you got. Tip. Try and practice on a flat piece first before going on curved windows. Also I think acrylic lacquer will work better than water based as it'll bond better with the plastic. (For clear pieces, as for tinted plastic is hard to match the shade and not sure the clear will blend in with your piece)
Just a tip, when you do decals, it helps to apply some gloss clear coat to the spot the decals are going to be placed. This will prevent the decals from "silvering", which just means that the clear part around the color becomes visible.
I know on full size auto glass, clear resin is injected into the cracks and chips to fill them in and hide the crack. I wonder if there's a thin glue or resin that could fill and hide the cracks on the windshield in this car.
Omg I used to have one of the police style ones, when I was so so young. It broke my heart when it broke. I was playing with it and a kid stepped on it to be mean. Thanks for the memories, I miss that car lol
2 tips, first look up "micro set" its an acid that you brush on the decals after they set up, and for most water slide decals it eats the film away allowing the ink to settle down onto the model eliminating that shiny boarder left behind and its like $3 second, sharpie makes paint markers in silver that i have found gives better coverage, especially on light colors, then the regular sharpie. and you can also trim the felt tip to a sharper point for better control also i know ive jumped into a few of your how to vids and offered suggestions, i hope you don't take it as me correcting you or anything. the modeling world is divided and each group comes up with its own tips and tricks, and unfortunately alot of those dont trickle over to the other modeling groups, thats why i followed you, the hot glue casting trick blew my mind because i had never heard of it before, and none of my model railroading friends had heard of it. but even though i dont care about modifying hotwheels, i love some of your modeling tricks, and im offering my incite from my 15 years of a different end of modeling
oh no... I appreciate the tips.... it's such a vast hobby that I can't pretend to know a tenth of it... I watch a ton of modelers and wargamers paint their stuff and then transition a lot of it over to HW... some of it like the hot glue casting I came up with... but I am sure someone else has done it before me... as for the micro set... I'm embarrassed to say that I have a bunch of it and could not find it for this video... so i just left it out so i could get the video out..the sharpie paint markers is a great idea.. I have some and will give that a try.. please feel free to offer up tips any time!! and thanks for watching!
If you notice, most setting solutions smell like vinegar, as that's what they are. I use a dilute solution of white vinegar that the wife has on hand for cleaning.
I feel like you missed an opportunity for an epic Mad Max model... have exhaust or something running from the engine up through the roof, like one big exhaust pipe. Could have used the method you showed previously for "action effects" to have smoke pouring out of it. I get that the intact red dome is important and all, but still.
Hey, +baremetalHW, here are some good ideas for custom vehicles if you want to use some ideas. I would like for you to either use the Matchbox 1978 Dodge Monaco or 1977 Hot Wheels police car (I think that it is built upon a Plymouth Fury), and modify either one of them to look more like the 1978 Dodge Monaco or 1977 Plymouth Fury and then add one of those 1990-1998 Chevrolet Caprice/Caprice Classic/Impala/Impala SS light bars from one of those Maisto/Tonka police cars (and, if you can somehow, figure out a way to get the doors to open and close as well as to make the headlights, side lights, and light bar lights be installed in the vehicle) and to get rid of the old light bar on the Dodge Monaco and the lame light bar and fix the top of the Plymouth Fury. How are those for some good ideas for a police car?
do you ever revisit cars from older eps like these? your newer techniques could prob work well on the windshield and light dome here. would also be an interesting vid to show “modern methods” in action 😃
I had that car as a kid...very young. First thing I did was wonder "What does the red button do?" and pushed it through. I wouldn't be surprised if that's what happened there...
You should've replaced the windshield; since we've seen 2 cracks, not just no side windshields. I realized that this Matchbox toy car is now, the MP car is what it looks like.
The crack on the driver side pillar, I’ve seen other restores fix it with crazy glue and baking powder.And I was wondering why you didn’t paint the driver, and put some detail in the interior. Other than that the car Came out nice. I watch your channel all the time, keep up the good work.
Re cracks in glass. the old Johnson's Klear used to be good but I heard they changed it. Also, White glue dries clear. Superglue is good for real glass but don't know what it would do to plastic. It's thin enough to run into cracks. Best test it first...
You did an excellent job on putting the stickers on i wish hot wheels would allow you make you own custom hot wheels so i could get a hot wheel and make my own design and have in delivered for like 4 pounds like in Lego digital designer
Try using Future floor polish for clear parts, after a bit of a polish, it is a clear acrylic that will hide small scratches. I'm a static scale modeler, we use it all the time to do clear parts, as well as a gloss overcoat. It works well under waterslide decals to prevent that silver look that you can get with water, as an under and overcoat for the decal prevents a reflective layer from forming. www.swannysmodels.com/TheCompleteFuture.html
I've noticed that ... few of the customizers and none of the restorers on these cast metal cars ever want to do anything with interior detail plastic beyond clean it. It's true that the kind of plastic used doesn't take paint well; maybe that has something to do with it.
I have that same sheet left over from when I built it. It's the Tamiya 1/35th scale M41 walker bulldog. The kit is pretty cheap and you see it at basically every hobby lobby ever.
I have a Ford Galaxie Fire Chief car that I painted over with model paint when I was a kid. I would like to give this to you and mail it at my expense. It is missing the siren and the trailer hitch. I just don't want it to go to waste. If it can be restored just keep it. I'll see if you reply to this message with a response.