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2016 'Copter Reissue ships Friday

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

This 26 piece set includes the Sea King Helicopter and 2 dozen M16 soldiers molded in flexible cyan blue color LDPE plastic with very little flashing. The helicopter is approximately 1:48 scale and the figures are 1:35 scale. A new sticker sheet with the Star & Bars insignia is also included.


TimMee "Stryker"

Thursday, August 4, 2016

TMA's resident mad scientist is at it again. And this time he's really outdone himself by creating a true TimMee Frankenstein. Included with the photos are his laboratory notes...



I wanted to make a six-wheel APC.  I had a broken XM177, and one missing its wheels.  I sawed the rear panel off one, a the other in two in front of the rear wheel well, and spliced them together with sheet styrene and hot glue.

I was stumped for a long time on armament.  None of the available turrets looked right.  Looking at real world APCs, I noticed that a lot of them have a remote-operated heavy machine gun instead of a turret.  So, I added a pintle-mounted gun looted from a PP jeep.

I capped the 2nd turret hole with a piece of 1/16 inch sheet styrene, cut to fit.  I think it turned out pretty well.


Indeed it did. Reminds ya of the Stryker, doesn't it? This blogger wants a dozen of them...AT LEAST!!!



Thank you, Mr. Mad Scientist.


Just for kicks...

Monday, June 13, 2016

Here's a rendering of what a TimMee Air Force helicopter might look like. Now don't go gettin' all excited. Yours truly was just having a bit of fun. But wouldn't it be perfect for those classic Air Force figures. Throw in a Jeep and ya got yourself a complete playset. Aim high, J. Lloyd!


Tim-Mee Mutants

Monday, June 6, 2016

Back in January a blog reader submitted his Cargo Truck-Gun-Mod and has now followed it up with several new cool mods he refers to as the "Tim-Mee Mutants." Below are the photos of the mods along with his thoughts and any necessary instructions. Enjoy! 

After I did my gun-truck mod, I decided to make my own self-propelled anti-aircraft gun (SPAAG).  While going through my collection to find beat up and/or knockoff M48s for the project, I found a couple of the other variations. This inspired me and the vehicles pictured are the result.  I call them “Tim-Mee Mutants”. In addition to the M35 gun truck, they are:


XM177 turret on the M48 chassis
This is a surprisingly attractive vehicle. It looks to me like an Eastern-bloc tracked APC – Soviet/Russian BMD series, for example.


Payton machine gun turret on the M48 chassis


M48 turret on the XM800 chassis
I thought this looked ridiculously over-gunned until I did a little research.  It turns out that the “tank caliber gun on a wheeled vehicle” idea has been around for a while.  The South Africans actually had a couple of versions.  One of them, the Mk7 Eland, acquitted itself well (mainly by being hella fast and maneuverable, compared to the enemy tanks) against Angolan T-34 and PT-76 tanks.  More recently and closer to home, the US Army is fielding the M1128 Stryker Mobile Gun System.


Payton machine gun turret on the XM800 chassis


Sidewinder missile launcher on the XM800 chassis


Sidewinder missile launcher on the M48 chassis

The last two vehicles (pictured above) use a four-rail Sidewinder missile launcher I pulled off the ridiculous trailer-mount included in some New Ray “Glorious Mission” playsets.  (New Ray cut a hole in the top of the launcher and added a gunner’s seat, because nothing improves a gunner’s combat performance like a point-blank face full of solid-rocket motor exhaust. ?)
On each of the missile launcher vehicles, I had to raise the launcher component so it rotates freely when the missiles are tilted up.  I used a 3/4-inch PVC pipe bushing with a hexagonal flange as a base.  Once the hole for the turret spindle and the spokes are cut out, push the top of the bushing through the chassis from the underside.  Two flat sides of the hexagonal flange fit almost perfectly between the ribs on the underside of both the M48 and the XM177 chassis.  A couple of shims cut from 1/16-inch sheet styrene and a line of hot glue holds it solidly.  Then cap the bushing with another piece of sheet styrene cut to fit.  Drill a hole in the styrene large enough for the pin on the bottom of the missile launcher and use a flat head screw to hold the launcher in place.  (I saved and reused the original screw used to attach the launcher to the New Ray trailer.)
New Ray missile launcher on M48 chassis:  Something like this was actually built.  It was a Sidewinder launcher mounted on an M113-derived chassis, and was called the MIM-72 Chaparral. (Comparing the pictures, it’s clear the New Ray toy was based on either this launcher, or on the  The main difference is the truck-cab driver position on the Chaparral.  Since my self-propelled anti-aircraft missile launcher (SPAAM) has an M48 chassis, I think the driver can stay inside the hull ;-)

Bonus

Cargo truck-gun mod

A big thanks to Mr. Mod!