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Friday, May 22, 2026

Floyd Bennett Field Hanger B Tour

 

A message from member Frank DeSisto:

Hello BPMS! Once again, I am proposing to conduct a tour of the aircraft collection inside Hanger B at Floyd Bennett Field. The date is Saturday June 6th at 10AM. I also propose a "trunk sale/swap meet" in the parking lot afterwards, for those of you who may wish to add to or subtract from the stash. ALL are welcome!

BPMS Zoom Mini Meeting: 05/26/2026

Part 1 starts promptly at 7:30 PM EST.
Part 2 starts at 8:10 PM if we need more time.

Members and guests are cordially invited to join our group for our weekly online meeting! 

All are welcome! If you would like to join, DM us your email address and name so we can include you in the email list with Zoom Meeting details (meeting numbers and passwords)!

On the agenda:

BPMS Club News.
IPMS News.
Other clubs news.
Hobby News.
What's on your workbench?
Featured Discussion 
 
 
  

Thursday, May 21, 2026

BPMS Zoom Mini Meeting: 05/19/2026

Discussion Topic: You use it in your kitchen. Ever use it at your workbench? 
 
Thirteen people attended. The Japan Village group build is this Saturday, the 23rd, at 934 3rd Ave, in Brooklyn, from 1-6pm.  Accessible by public transit. 

Lou reports Revell Germany's 1/72 F-15C and Pz 4  Möbelwagen 37mm Flak 43 are available. 

The Vertical Flight theme contest is June 19th, same night as Picnic Night. The contest is free; the picnic isn't ($10.00 per person). 

Planning to attend Noreastcon (2695 Henrietta Rd, Henrietta NY ) on June 13 ?  If so, good luck. And bring back some pictures, please.

In IPMS news, Mark thanked Frank C for his article on BPMS for the Journal (publication date TBD).  IPMS contacted Bobby asking for write ups on models underrepresented in IPMS, like Gundam, fantasy and monsters.  They're interested in people and what they build, according to Bobby.

Getting back to the Semiquincentennial, Jimmy shared photos of a USMC F-18B (MALS 11) in special markings. Very impressive.  Erasmo shared photos of rare, historic, aircraft at the Aviodrome Museum in the Netherlands and the Royal Military Museum in Brussels.  

We saw Erasmo's Twin Mustang, Gordon's MSM 0 3C HyGogg, Simon's vintage Hiller X-18 Convertiplane, Kevin's Alce and the Cheshire Cat (with fluorescent paint highlights) and a sculpted pillow for Salome, Gil's 1/10 Wilma Flintstone, Mark's US Army, Afrika Korps and Iraqi figures, Frank C's HH-53C and Russ' Vigilante RA 5C. 
 
Acquisitions included: M1A2 SEP V-2, T-90 M, McLaren MCL 39 (a diecast from Bburago), and ROK FA-50. 

Eye protection/safety glasses was this week's tool.  Always a good idea, especially when you're using a rotary tool or grinder.  Thanks for reminding us, Gil. 

The topic was kitchen items we use for modeling. First thing to remember- when something becomes a modeling tool, never use it to prepare food again. That said, coffee mug and baby bottle warmers can warm spray paint cans, food dehydrators can speed up paint drying, and toaster ovens can bake sculpted items. Sponges are good for dry brushing, and non-scratch pads are good for weathering. Plastic cutting boards work as well as cutting mats. Paper towels can be used to smooth a surface. Wash parts with a hand strainer, very small parts with a tea infuser. Windex can remove mold release agents from kit parts. Products like Saran wrap or aluminum foil can be useful for masking. Parchment paper works in a wet pallet. Make self-adhesive foil by coating wax paper with gilding adhesive and carefully lay out the foil. Cut the foil as needed, peel from the wax paper and apply to the model. Chopsticks or bamboo skewers or toothpicks make good handles for painting. Toothpicks are also good for removing excess paint from canopy frames. A serving tray can be a portable workbench.  A small coffee frother can mix paint if you're very careful. Salt can be used to give paint a weathered look and baking powder mixed with thin super glue can fill gaps (remove excess material promptly). 
 
The next meeting is Tuesday, 5/26/26 at 7:30pm. Invites to follow. Hope to see you there. In the meantime, have a good Memorial Day. 
 
~Russ

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Bulletin Archive in PDF Format

All links should be updated to MEGA at this time.
Please comment and let me  know if you find bad links! ~Editor
 
 
 
 
 
 

Bulletin 2019 06
Bulletin 2019 05
Bulletin 2019 04
Bulletin 2019 03
Bulletin 2019 02
Bulletin 2019 01

Bulletin 2018 12
Bulletin 2018 11
Bulletin 2018 10
Bulletin 2018 09
Bulletin 2018 08
Bulletin 2018 07
Bulletin 2018 06

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Doloha Paint Markers

I am happy to announce that Doloha Paint Markers kindly reached out to me for a cooperative effort. I have been meaning to test out the paint markers for a while, so this is the perfect opportunity. A review of these products will be forthcoming.
 
 
~Bob 

 

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Army Painter Discount

 Want to try Army Painter paints? Need to restock your colors? Army Painter has a discount for you. I personally have their Speed Paints 2.0 and love it (KK)

 


Wednesday, May 06, 2026

BPMS Inhouse Meeting: May 15, 2026

Welcome to MAY! Time flies! We’re already up top our second quarterly contest and the first theme contest is around the corner.

CONTEST NIGHT 2Q26: By the model counts each month everyone has been pretty busy getting models done. So now we have our quarterly contest so that members can accumulate more votes for the annual awards in December. Feel free to bring back models that you haven’t placed in competition previously.

PARTS BOX NIGHT: We all have parts boxes. If you like, please bring yours to share with the group in case there’s something someone else has been looking for… Or you can bring extra parts to toss into the club’s communal parts box. That thing is like a treasure trove!

STRAIGHT UP! Reminder! You have one month to prepare for the Vertical Take Off Theme Contest.


Meeting Date: MAY 15, 2026
Members start showing up by 5PM to set up.
Feel free to come early and hang-out!

Inside the Abandoned Aurora Plastics Factory: The Tragic Death of Slot Car Racing

Another interesting historical video regarding the hobby:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PWiu8dYDj94 

Inside the Revell Factory: How America's Model Kit Empire Was Abandoned

A very interesting video:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AWL3xwL4LnY 

Tuesday, May 05, 2026

BPMS ZOOM Mini Meeting Report: 05/05/2026

Fourteen people attended. No Zoom next Tuesday. The in-person meeting is Friday, 5/15/26, at the Community Center, in Brooklyn. Be there for Parts Box Night and the second Quarterly Contest, not to mention cake and coffee.

There's a group build at Japan Village, 934 3rd Ave, in Brooklyn, from 1-6 pm on Saturday, 5/23/26. Thanks to Julio and the co-organizers for setting it up.

Lou reports Heller's new 1/72 E 2C Hawkeye, with folding wings, is available.

We saw Vaughn's F-101 C and Sikorsky S-38, Nestor's DC-3 to LC-47H conversion, Mr. K's Challenger (the British tank, not the American car), IL 28 (marked as a Finnish target tug), Bristol Beaufighter (another target tug paint scheme), '56 Chevy Bel Air and '32 Ford Street Rod (both painted with nail polish), Simon's Ju-52 (the old Airfix kit), Saab B16, Kawasaki P1, Westland Wyvern, and Mitsubishi A5M, Kevin's 3D printed Alce in Wonderland figure, Frank C's AV-8B Harrier, Bobby's 'Buddy Cuthulhu' and Russ' Vigilante RA 5C. Acquisitions included: T34-85 (the 1/16 kit was free, provided it gets built), 3D printed Kubelwagon crew in winter gear, marbling masking tape, US Civil War Zouave, two 3D printed female figures copied from 19th century paintings, Preiser German and Soviet Infantry figures (see, not everything is 3D printed), and a headband magnifier.

The tool of the week was the Peasug deburring tool. Designed for heavy duty work on metal, it's also good at cleaning up softer material, like 3D printed parts, or wood, or plastic. Gil got it from Amazon. Similar tools are available elsewhere.

3D printing was the featured topic. No one disagreed when Simon said 3D printing was the future of scale modeling, yet half the people at the meeting had little to no experience with 3D printed parts or kits. Joe commented on the detail of the 3D printed N scale railroad equipment he found. Jimmy, a convert from photo etch to 3DP, is very familiar with manufacturers and suppliers from around the world. He's impressed with all the aftermarket he's seen - AFV tool clamps, brush guards, and woven mesh engine vent covers, jet exhaust nozzles, and ordnance, pilots, and military figures, in any scale you need. And if you can't find what you want, you'll probably find a STL file you can have printed. Just Google the item name with the letters STL added or visit the Cults 3D website. Other observations: Prints from resin printers are more detailed than prints from filament printers. High resolution printers were mentioned but not really discussed. t's a good idea to wash the printed piece before handling it, especially if it's tacky or has a strong odor. Bobby says exposure to full spectrum light can eliminate the odor. Play it safe and wear gloves until the piece is thoroughly cleaned (ask Julio). Removing large items from their supports is usually easy, not so for small scale items. Frank C found this out after getting a 1/144 aircraft ground support crew and equipment print. Gil thinks an oscillating knife would work, but it's not cheap. A soak in hot water, a hair dryer, a razor saw and patience may be the way to go. Surface imperfections caused by removing supports can be filled with UV curing resin. Finally, be aware that hollow or partially hollow printed pieces must breathe. They need a functioning vent hole, or else the piece will self-destruct.

The next meeting is Friday, 5/15/26 at the Community Center, 2303 Bergen Ave, in Brooklyn. Doors open around 5pm. Parts Box Night and the second Quartey Contest. Hope to see you there.

~Russ