Hasegawa 1/24 Lamborghini Miura P400 SV

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D

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My all time favourite dream car, the Lamborghini Miura SV. Some would say it's the most beautiful car ever made, which is a bold statement, but seeing some of my research pictures I certainly wouldn't argue.

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I searched for a while to find the right kit as I've read the Italeri has some shape and detail errors. The Hasegawa ones are apparently better but harder to find. My wife ended up buying this through Amazon at a bargain price as a Fathers day present, and I patiently waited for it to arrive from Japan.

It's been sat waiting for me to finish my Hind, and progress will likely be slow as I have a much bigger and more important project on the go right now - fitting a kitchen for my mum, but I've managed to make a start so I thought I'd get a couple of pictures up. Box was slightly damaged but everything inside was fine.

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Plenty of parts to go at, soft rubber like tyres, nice decals and "chrome" type adhesive stickers too. Thanks to some advice I've stripped the chrome plating from the wheels as they need to be silver, matching the lower section of the bodywork, for my chosen colour scheme.

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The bonnet grilles roughly centre of the shot look particularly fun. They are really fine and surrounded by all types of runners and gates so will take some careful clean up.

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First job was to remove the mould lines from the body. These were quite small and placed where they'd be easy to remove so no real drama. I also roughly trimmed some of the mould lines and pin marks inside the shell too. These will all be covered up but I wanted to be sure they wouldn't interfere with fit later down the line.

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Then the distinctive side scoops were added and sanded as flush as I could. I used some Mr Dissolved putty to fill the hairline gap that remained. That was sanded once dry then overcoated with surfacer 500 which will ensure a seamless blend into the body once sanded smooth.

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I've also made a start on putting the dashboard together. This is two parts so again I'm filling and sanding the seams that aren't present on the real thing.

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I also really think it's time I invested in some decent sprue cutters. The super cheap Modelcraft economy ones I've been using up to now have a really thick jaw so I struggle getting into tight spots with them. I know I can hack off a chunk of sprue and trim later but that isn't always possible, and with the hard plastic of this kit I'm worried about snapping something. My son lets me borrow his Citadel ones which are far superior, but I think I ought to get my own!

Anyway, that's it for now and I'll update as and when I get time off from the building work to get some bench time in.

Thanks for looking,
Andy.
 
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I've seen a few videos that mention red plastic being particularly troublesome. The colour can apparently leach out of the plastic when using solvent paints and bleed through to the final finish. No problem if I were painting it red, but I'm not. I don't know if it's true but rather than take the risk I started off with a black base that will visually absorb any colour leaching through.

The whole thing was given a sand with a 1000 grit Mirka Abralon sanding sponge to key up the surface and refine any sanding scratches from previous work. It was washed in warm water with Stardrops and white vinegar, rinsed thoroughly, dried, then given a final wipe with a water/alcohol pre-paint cleaner we use at work. After a blow and a wipe with a tack rag it received two light coats of Mr Finish Surfacer 1500, thinned with MLT. I laid an old tack rag on the bench to try and catch any dust that got blown around.

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Lovely smooth finish, no doubt helped by Barry W's tip of giving it a final mist coat of MLT.

Once dry it will get a light sand then the outside will get two more coats of Surfacer 1500, mixed closely to Specral Grey shade 03, which is the recommended ground coat for my chosen final colour.
 

Dave Ward

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I one spent a month or so re-enginining a Lamborghini. I had the engine removed, and all the mounting points measured - as well as measuring up the flywheel & gearbox mating faces.
I designed new plates, to mount the box, machined a flywheel to suit the clutch etc, and our fitters shoehorned the new engine into place. Sadly the gearbox & transmission weren't up the large amount of torque the new engine generated!
If this sounds a bit unlikely - it was a Lamborghini tractor! Tractors were how they made their money ( and still do ). We removed their 4-cylinder diesel & replaced it with our turbocharged 4-cylinder diesel. The project never went anywhere ( like about 75% of our projects ).
That was a period that I remember fondly, - it was a real thrill to go to work! I designed all sorts of installations, from gen sets, to canal boats, and APU units for the Challenger tank.
Dave
 
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Yes, I'm sure not everyone knows about the companies history. I believe he started by salvaging/converting ex military vehicles.

Sounds like a very interesting job John, no wonder you enjoyed it so much!
 

minitnkr

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A beautiful car. Excellent coachwork so far. Looks very "today" in primer. Back in the late 50s/early 60s we put small block Chevys in everything imaginable due to their high HP/torque per pound. From Ford pickups to Jeeps. My fave though was 'Studilacs'. Cadillac V8s in 53-54 Studabaker Commanders. Amazing torque, stable over 100mph, and looked good. Didn't stop well, but nothing domestic did then. One of the guys did a late 50s Austin Healey with what we called a "square4", Chevy modified to a 4" bore & stroke, scary fast. Later, it was 350 Chevys in Jaguar coupes/sedans. Those could stop too, and were more comfy. PaulE
 
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That's true petrol head stuff Paul, everyone deserves a V8 in their life at some point.
 

stillp

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Yes, I'm sure not everyone knows about the companies history. I believe he started by salvaging/converting ex military vehicles.
They still make military vehicles. I believe Ferrucio Lamborghini only started making cars because Enzo Ferrari wouldn't sell him a car because he was too 'uncouth'.
Pete
 
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They still make military vehicles. I believe Ferrucio Lamborghini only started making cars because Enzo Ferrari wouldn't sell him a car because he was too 'uncouth'.
Pete
There's a couple of different versions of that story. The other is that Lamborghini in fact owned and raced a Ferrari, but after repeated issues with the clutch he confronted Enzo about the matter and was pretty much told to buzz off and go back to his tractors.

Either way it seems Enzo was the reason we have Lambo cars today.
 
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I'm trying to decide on an interior colour for this. Out of the 150 made around half had the black interior the instructions call for, but I'm thinking it might be too bland and indistinct. They've tried to mix it up by calling for a mixture of RLM66, flat black, and the amusingly misspelt "semi gross black" but I'm still concerned it might just be a sea of blandness.

Another popular choice was senape, basically a hideous tan colour that only a mother could love, mostly found on the US cars I think.

That leaves me with brown (no!) , blue, or white (with black carpets). The white is currently my favourite but I'm having a hard time finding out if it was ever used on a factory car with my favoured exterior colour (of which only 6 were made).

More research needed, but I may just end up going with what I fancy and blow the realism :flushed:
 

minitnkr

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I remember when you could do that. Mernan Chevrolet in the summer of 63 w/a friend who was ordering a 64 Chevy Biscayne as a graduation gift from his parents. The salesman laid a form in front of him with all the options listed. There must have been over 200 of them, including 6 differential ratios, two automatic transmissions, three standard transmissions w/a choice of two gear ratio sets each and 4 different engines with a myriad of performance options. Naturally he chose the 427cu, in. 425hp engine, 4speed close ratio trans w/4.11:1 diff. All other options were "DELETE" or cheapest choice so to fall w/in parental budget. I believe it was less than $2700. Good days. Today it's "I got three colors on the lot in the 30 to 40 grand range". PaulE
 
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In between some first fix plumbing, laying new flooring, installing a few cupboards and adding a spurred socket outlet from the ring main, I managed to get a bit of bench time!

It seems to be a big thing amongst car modellers to flock the floor to simulate carpets. Well I didn't have any of that so had a go at stippling on some surfacer 500 to create a little texture.

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With a bit of flat black over, it doesn't look too horrific.

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Did a bit of work on the dashboard. It all went a bit pear shaped as I was trying to paint the flat black over the RLM66 grey. Solvent paints over solvent paints tend to lift, which messed it up royally. I cleaned the mess up best I could and brushed some Vallejo flat black over it instead. Plenty of decals to go on here yet for the gauges so hopefully it won't look too bad once finished.

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Seats and separate headrests painted semi gloss black. Radio was called as just black on the instructions but I picked out the buttons in silver and display was silver with a coat of clear orange over. The two locating holes between the seat backrests are for some black & silver vents that I've painted before fitting for ease.

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And with the dash rested in place. The chrome gear lever gate is a sticker, of which there are several more for around the dials and some switchgear.

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Also had a go at drilling out the holes in the steering wheel with 0.5 & 0.75mm bits. Might have looked better if they were central but hey ho, no going back now.

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JR

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My word Andy this is looking neat, love the idea for the floor and those seats look the dogs.
Nice to see Mirka and tack rags getting a mention :smiling2::thumb2:.
 
D

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Thanks John, neat and clean is the aim. Probably the exact opposite of most of the armour and military stuff built on here where that "lived in" look is desirable. The close ups have revealed a few issues but nothing I can't fix.

And I have loads of bodyshop supplies dotted around the sheds. I was self employed for a while, working out of a van, so had quite a stock. With the tiny amounts we use in this hobby the left overs will probably do me for a lifetime :smiling5:
 
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