This is a Reshape kit that is now sold by Comet Miniatures.
Unlike the Comet and Sevans Daleks, the skirt comes as a single part – a fact
that took me by surprise when I opened the box. The five major parts (skirt,
Davros, three ‘globe’ sections) were covered in flash and were slightly
malformed in places, most significantly at the hinges for the moving section of
the globe. Thus, the time I expected to spend on assembly was spent on tidying
up!
Just a gallery of the Sevans and Comet Miniatures Doctor Who model kits I assembled when I was younger.
Monday, 14 January 2013
Comet Miniatures Davros
Comet Miniatures Dalek 2
I bought a Movie Dalek with a view to making it into a
destroyed version of a TV one. I discarded the dome and cut away part of the
neck bin such that it looked like the top had blown off. Inside, you can see
the dead Dalek-creature itself and the controls (not visible in these photos). The creature is based on
the ones seen in the New episodes.
Comet Miniatures Dalek 1
Having only done Sevans models before, this one was a
doddle. An interesting difference (for the kit-maker) between Sevans
Dalek-skirts and Comet ones is the way they do the hemispheres. The former have
them moulded onto the panels, and the latter have them separate, with stubs to
attach them to the panels with. So with Comet you get a far easier paint job
but a longer assembly process.
Sevans Dalek
I did what I believe is the usual thing and made this one into
a Genesis version so it could complement the Davros.
Externally, the only
creative thing I did was to ‘play down’ the blueness of the eyestalk discs, due
to my not liking the way they stand out in these Daleks. I did one or two
interesting things internally, which you can see in the fourth photo.
Sevans Davros
Of all the kits I’ve assembled, this is the one I’m the most
pleased with. Whereas the main join lines on my Cyberman are visible, and those
on my Ice Warrior are discernable, the ones on my Davros are such that you
wouldn’t be blamed for thinking that his torso came as one single part!
I mixed a custom pot of paint for his skin, and then did
some shading and other little effects to make the finish as realistic as
possible.
Sevans Ice Warrior
This kit gives you the choice of a “Varga” or a “Turoc” head. I
opted for the latter at the time, though years later I did the second head and
can now put either of them onto the body. With my model, each head sits on a
cannibal-style ‘head pole’ (a modified cling-film roll) that I simply insert
into the torso.
Sevans Cyberman
I put this one together when I was quite young, so it isn’t
too professional, with the worst thing being the obvious ‘join lines’ where the
halves of the moulds fit together.
The things that I remember being most
difficult were stretching the spring to slide over the tube connecting the
chest unit to the back unit, and fitting the head onto the shoulders. The
easier parts included taping the tubing onto the body, and assembling the chest
unit.
Interestingly, it looks a lot better in photographs
than it does in real life!
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