Review Casualty toll from Scale75

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narn08

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 16, 2016
Messages
99
Hello
Y
Here is a quick review of a nice metal figure from Scale75.

I love this figure because of the his pose and the story suggested.

The figure comes in an attractive box, inside well packed between foam layers .

Casting is nice, but some cleaning is required because of molding lines.

More attention is needed on some parts because the fit is not 100% percent, but nothing serious.

Easy to fix it. The "worst" part is around the trunk but with a small amount of milliput is fixable in no time.

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This is interesting. It's a nice piece when painted up, but looking at the photos just shows how far the quality of casting has come in just a few short years.

This figure only came out in 2012 - just six years ago - but the casting can't hold a candle to the standard of the resin figures that the newer companies (mainly in Russia and Spain) are now knocking out at a rapid rate. They're crisp, they're sharp, they're detailed, and they need little (if any) clean-up or filler. And they make this look like something from the 1980s.

Resin is definitely the future, I think that white metal has had its day. Especialy with 3D printing becoming more and more common. The way things are going, it won't be long before metal will be something for nostalgics only.

- Steve
 
This is interesting. It's a nice piece when painted up, but looking at the photos just shows how far the quality of casting has come in just a few short years.

This figure only came out in 2012 - just six years ago - but the casting can't hold a candle to the standard of the resin figures that the newer companies (mainly in Russia and Spain) are now knocking out at a rapid rate. They're crisp, they're sharp, they're detailed, and they need little (if any) clean-up or filler. And they make this look like something from the 1980s.

Resin is definitely the future, I think that white metal has had its day. Especialy with 3D printing becoming more and more common. The way things are going, it won't be long before metal will be something for nostalgics only.

- Steve

they need little (if any) clean-up or filler
and they are very fragile and breaks easily, some are porous or with air bubbles, and the entry point where they are cast are thick and very often a pain in .. to remove

3D printing becoming more and more common
today they are perhaps 2 or 3 producers on almost 1000 known ones still in production, who delivers 3D printed figures

Crisp and sharp
Phoenix already in the 70ies produced crisp and sharp perfect fiting figures as Poste Militaire, as Barton/Ceremonial....
Among the ones who produce(d) in resin , some were not crips, not sharp and not fiting good

But let's hope for improvement for all
 
they need little (if any) clean-up or filler
and they are very fragile and breaks easily, some are porous or with air bubbles, and the entry point where they are cast are thick and very often a pain in .. to remove

Sure - if you're talking about the old stuff from Verlinden, Imperial Gallery et al (besides which, fragile metal pieces break just as easily as fragile resin ones).

I've not had anything like that from the Altores, FeRs, Evolutions, Mercurys, Tin Berlins, Revolutions and Tartars of this world. And last week I took delivery of a figure from Rogan's Heroes from Ireland which was likewise pretty much flawless. Maybe I've just been lucky ;).

today they are perhaps 2 or 3 producers on almost 1000 known ones still in production, who delivers 3D printed figures

Let's have this conversation again a couple of years down the line and see then where we are. Like I said, it's the way things are heading.

- Steve
 
Horses for courses as they say, a well cast and painted metal figure FEELS like your holding something of value , however, resin feels ...well...like plastic!

Chailey
 
The casting of scale 75 has never been great the last one I bought had a great pose but it was so poor in comparison to metal models that I plonked it in the trash bin :eek: and never even looked that way again .

The 3d suff is moving along at high speed and we are now seeing the same figure in different scales.
Example ; you can get the latest Andrea mounted artillery officer in 54, 75 and 90mm this is a game changer .

I am currently waiting on the delivery of the 54mm version which will be my first 3D figure " No more I like it but its not my scale excuses" :rolleyes:

Just a footnote on scales : the first 75 mm figures came out when Ray Lamb was sculpting for Hinchcliff and the reason they got so popular was the extra detail available at this scale, somewhere along the line we seem to have lost this even with the 120 mm stuff ; hopefully the 3D will get us back to where we should be in the larger scales.
 
The casting of scale 75 has never been great the last one I bought had a great pose but it was so poor in comparison to metal models that I plonked it in the trash bin :eek: and never even looked that way again.

That's been my experience as well Ron. The only Scale75 figure I've finished that was a really good casting was the Lt. Dick Winters 101st Airborne. And mirroring your own S75 experience, their Japanese officer ended up in the bin it was that bad.

I just don't buy metal figures any more, and I'm in the process of thinning down my metal stash. Some I'll keep, and some I'll probably even still paint. But these days I just find resin a far more enjoyable medium to work with on various levels.

"No more I like it but its not my scale excuses" :rolleyes:

No - now it'll just be "it's a nice figure, but when are we going to get a [whatever]" :rolleyes:

- Steve
 
Have mostly made Young Miniatures 1:10th busts and have got used to resin. My last efforts in metal go back to Hinchcliffe Napoleonics in the'70s so have forgotten much about them. My recent completion is the Scale75 Coldstreamer at Waterloo. This was really nicely moulded - so much so that I have now bought the Brunswick Officer to go with it. However, at my wife's prompting, I have bought the Alexandros Models Oni-ni-kanobo. This has now arrived and it is a metal figure so I will have to see how it goes.
David
 
i am just cleaning this figure up as we speak, i like the pose, and i still think that metal figures have a place and with a bit of work and patience, should be as good as any other rein figure.--will have a go and see how i get on.
 
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