It took a long time but I finally finished my Apollo 11 metal earth model kit. These are no joke when it comes to difficulty!

  • @nezbyte
    link
    810 months ago

    Well done, it’s beautiful! Was this your first metal earth kit? Any tips for someone who failed horribly on a previous metal earth kit attempt?

    • circuitfarmer
      link
      510 months ago

      I’m not OP, but I can share what I found myself doing these kits. Angles on manipulated pieces are extremely important. You really need good leverage with some pliers that also have very, very small ends.

    • @ki77erbOP
      link
      410 months ago

      This was actually my second one. The first one I did was the Millennium Falcon. This was WAY harder than the Falcon. My advice is to check the metal earth website for the difficulty ratings and start with an easier one first. Get a good set of tweezers. Read each step very carefully more than once. Get a lot of light on your workspace. I used a desk lamp. Don’t bend any piece more than twice because you risk snapping it. I made a few mistakes. I actually broke one panel on the LM that you can see pretty clearly in the picture. I’m going to glue it.

    • Clay_pidgin
      link
      fedilink
      English
      310 months ago

      I had a Zeppelin, maybe Hindenberg? And it was way beyond my skill level.

    • @ki77erbOP
      link
      310 months ago

      Those thrusters were hard as hell! I tried using the tip of a pencil to roll it round but it didn’t work very well. I just ended up using the very tip of the tweezers and carefully fold each corner the best I could. They’re certainly not perfect but they look ok.

  • @Everythingispenguins
    link
    310 months ago

    What is this? A LM and CM for ants? How can we be expected to send men to the moon if they can’t even fit inside the module?

    Really great work it looks beautiful.