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		<title>CollectionDX - HY2M</title>
		<link>http://www.collectiondx.com/taxonomy/term/232/0</link>
		<description></description>
		<language>en</language>
		<pubDate>Tue, 03 Oct 2006 22:37:36 -0400</pubDate>
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			<title>CollectionDX - HY2M</title>
			<link>http://www.collectiondx.com/taxonomy/term/232/0</link>
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		<title>Hyper Hybrid Rick-Dom</title>
		<link>http://www.collectiondx.com/node/690</link>
		<description>
 I like the Rick-Dom. 
        It&#039;s the big fat bad as hell armored hulk combat mecha for the Zeon space 
        force.: 
 

</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="flexinode-body flexinode-1"><div class="flexinode-textfield-1"><div class="form-item">
 <label>Toy Name: </label>
 Rick-Dom
</div>
</div><div class="flexinode-textfield-3"><div class="form-item">
 <label>Scale: </label>
 1:60
</div>
</div><div class="flexinode-textarea-8"><div class="form-item">
 <label>I like the Rick-Dom. 
        It's the big fat bad as hell armored hulk combat mecha for the Zeon space 
        force.<br class="giImageBlock-clear-both" />: </label>
 
</div>
</div><div class="flexinode-textarea-6"><div class="form-item">
 <label><p> A cold gray Sunday morning- My wife was at the temple, and I was on-line 
        looking at the Pre-Order Menu for the Big Bad Toy Store. This was risky 
        ground. Like in the old cartoons where the guy has a little devil whispering 
        in one ear and better judgment whispering in the other. I was in grave 
        danger of making an impulse buy that I probably couldn't afford. I kept 
        thinking about that Dancouga combining robot set, but I was also tempted 
        by (what I thought would be) a chogokin 1/60 Rick-Dom. I like the Rick-Dom. 
        It's the big fat bad as hell armored hulk combat mecha for the Zeon space 
        force. A menacing, almost medieval looking one-eyed brute. I went for 
        it. Later I would learn that the Dom was not to be a die-cast metal issue, 
        but some sort of "Glorious Grade" model kit. Oh. (Rule#1 when 
        buying on-line: do your homework!) OK, well, I wanted to start another 
        project anyway. A few weeks later the UPS truck stopped at my house. What 
        the man delivered here is the:</p>
      <p><b>"HY2M Hyper Hybrid Model Glorious Series 1/60 scale MS09R Rick-Dom."</b></p>
      <p> The box is big- almost 30 inches long by 15 wide- slightly larger than 
        the boxes for The Perfect Grade models, but it's corrugated cardboard 
        without the fancy graphics. Three inner boxes hold the kit. The assembly 
        manual is thick, but the model itself does not look terribly complicated. 
        There are 23 racks of big parts, and a lot of nuts and bolts.</p>
      <p> But the main event here is lights- twenty one lights to be exact. Twenty 
        one LED's to trim, and plug in, and connect to resistors, and wire up 
        to boxes, and switches, and batteries. Four separate circuits, each with 
        its own separate switch. Twenty two bags full of hardware, and almost 
        all of it electrical. Lights and wiring have been the weakest features 
        of the models I've built so far. At first glance, the instruction manual 
        looked almost indecipherable. I felt a little ill.</p>
      <p> I had to remind myself how intimidating the first big Bandai model had 
        been when I first opened it up. I started out feeling overwhelmed. I ended 
        up having a lot of fun. So I started The Dom by carefully reading the 
        instruction manual start to finish. Far from being indecipherable, it 
        is a superb piece of technical writing. Even if you don't read Japanese, 
        the instructions are clear, simple, and easy to follow. It didn't take 
        long before I was re-assured that this project was not beyond the skill 
        of an average mortal- just a long sequence of simple steps. That manual 
        (and the stuff that came with it) would turn out to be one of the most 
        fascinating books that I ever picked up.</p>
      <p> I couldn't quite make out what the very first row of panels on page 
        8 of the manual were about- something to do with cutting the parts from 
        the runners. After I started assembling I discovered what it was. The 
        engineers at Bandai took the time to solve one of the minor problems with 
        finish on their kits- the scar left on the separated piece when it is 
        cut from the runner. The molding here is done so that no sprue touches 
        the outer surface of the parts. But you do have to trim a little tab away 
        from the mating surfaces. The illustration shows the tab separating cleanly 
        from the part with just a little twist of your cutter. It works most of 
        the time. The down side of it is that it's easy to overlook one of the 
        little tabs, and the pieces don't mate cleanly until the last vestige 
        of the tabs is cut away.</p>
      <p> It took a couple of hours to finish the head. Like all Bandai products, 
        everything fit together just like it was supposed to. The crimp connectors 
        are tough to handle. You thread the pre-cut wire and the LED terminal 
        through a tiny brass bead, and then smash the bead with a pair of pliers 
        to hold it all together. The trick is to get a tight fitting without squeezing 
        too hard and breaking the wire or terminal. It's just as hard as it sounds. 
        Other than that, the assembly went easily. The camera eye is moveable; 
        the whole mechanism is well thought out, simply executed, and held together 
        with nuts and bolts. Luckily I had allen wrenches that fit the hardware. 
        Best of all- when I tested the finished assembly it lit up just fine! 
        My opinion of the Dom has risen. I'm having fun already, and most of my 
        doubts have been eased. I can't wait to get on with the next steps.<br>
        <br>
        The skeleton for the arm unit is simple and elegant. Composed of eight 
        parts, it features six points of articulation, and can mimic most of the 
        range of a human arm. All the fingers are fully jointed on the hand, too. 
        All working connections are fastened by nut and bolt, and can be individually 
        adjusted for tightness. Be careful of step 6. Parts K3&K4. It's not 
        enough to have the smaller end point forward. If the assembly is in upside 
        down the armor won't fit. (Guess how I found that out.) Likewise, remember 
        the sprue leaves a little tab right on the mating surfaces of some of 
        the armor. Trim carefully! The whole process for both arms took about 
        three hours.</p>
      <p> My opinion of this piece has risen greatly. That famous Bandai attention 
        to detail has been invested here in functional efficiency. Everything 
        is fixable; everything is adjustable; everything works . Like a haiku- 
        perfect function in exactly as many pieces as needed to do the job. But 
        next come the legs, and with them the first of the major lighting projects.</p>
      <p> The legs, too display the same functional elegance as the arm units: 
        few parts, much articulation, all adjustable. But I knew this would happen 
        sometime during this project- go to turn the lights on and some of them 
        won't light. The soles of the boots each feature three LED's. The installation 
        is not difficult, but you must pay very close attention to the illustrations 
        in the manual. (I'll mention this again) It's not nearly as scary a job 
        as I thought. But you do need to work carefully, and pay close attention 
        to the details in the drawing (see?). When I went to test one of the feet, 
        only two of the three lights lit. Not to worry. The parts disassemble 
        as easily as they go together, and after you've built the wiring, you'll 
        know how to trouble-shoot it. Make sure the LED terminals are snug in 
        the "Y"-shaped ground plate, and that the center screw is also 
        snug on the terminals. It was a quick fix, and now it works fine.</p>
      <p> Stringing the wires through the knee joint is tricky, as is the assembly. 
        Your dexterity will get a workout. This was pretty much an all day project. 
        I started in the morning, and wound it up just in time for dinner. I even 
        missed Dragon Ball Z, and I didn't care. </p>
      <p> Pay attention to detail; pay attention to little details in the picture;
         pay attention to every tiny detail of the picture, and double check
        twice  before fastening anything. If something doesn't seem to fit then
        you have  it wrong. Look at the picture again. There is no room for error
        in this  construction. And no spare parts. IF YOU LOSE ONE SCREW YOU
        ARE SCREWED.  Don't let me scare you off, I have no more than average
        mechanical dexterity-  I get about a "C" for all around handiness. I'm
        doing fine with  the building process. (Did I mention paying close attention
        to the pictures?) It's easy to work yourself into exhaustion and make
        mistakes- you won't want to stop to eat while you're doing this. I totally
        forgot to take pictures. Step by step it's getting closer. I have the
        double- jointed torso bolted up. The circuit box is in place. And there's
        no way the wires for the legs, and backpacks will reach. Oh, no. And
        of course I had no wire around the house that would work. I was wondering
        what I might find inside the computer, but... no. Trip to the store time.
        Radio Shack had no wire that would work. I was desperate. I ended up
        buying some cheap circuit tester just to cut it up for the wires. But
        I got the wires extended, and connected. Now to mount the arms, and get
        to the final hook-ups.</p>
      <p> <i>..."If you can meet with triumph and disaster, and treat 
        those two imposters just the same," ( Rudyard Kipling)</i></p>
      <p>I'm giddy from spending an entire week looking through magnifying lenses, 
        finding and manipulating skinny wires, little bitty screws, and impossibly 
        tiny parts that pop out of place when you try to secure them. A week of 
        nuts and bolts and joints and pivots and tabs and slots and armor and 
        lights. A week with the product of some magnificent engineers and artists.</p>
      <p> The Rick Dom stands completed on the table. The two "N"-type 
        batteries are installed. It's time to throw the switches. This moment
        is like facing the results of a big league college entrance exam. I feel
        like Doctor Frankenstein: Switch on the right: Go! and the yellow search
        lamp on the front lights up. Switch in the middle: Go! Nothing. I feel
        sick. Try again. Nothing. I feel sicker. Switch on the left: Go! Nothing.
        I feel worse. How could it not work? Don't panic. Think. I take a pair
        of tweezers, and bridge the gap between the metal tab and the ground
        strip. Everything lights fine. It has to be the switch. Now I'm elated.
        I remove the middle switch to remount it, and one of the #22 screws leaps
        from my fingertips, and vanishes with a faint tinkling sound. There is
        no spare. Hands and knees time. (odd what we consider fun) No #22 tiny
        black precious as gold screw anywhere, but... on the floor, behind the
        desk, covered in dust I find a green plastic bag with one tiny screw-
        a spare that Bandai was so kind to include with one of the Perfect Grade
        models that I built a while back. Some kind spirit favored me greatly.
        It fit. (I found the other one in a pencil box a couple days later.)
        Slowly tighten each screw evenly- Eureka! Light! Tighten it just until
        it's secure- Got it! The next one is also an easy fix. Three out of three.
        I'm so relieved I could cry. I'm too tired to do the gun. It's late in
        the afternoon, and my wife will be home... right now.</p>
      <p> "Well here it is." I show her the prize I won for doing all 
        this work.<br>
        "I don't like this one." she said. "He's menacing and dangerous. 
        There's nothing charming about him." She shudders. "He's just 
        ugly." (My wife is great at appropriate reactions)</p>
      <p> "Let me show you what he does." I carefully removed the head 
        and threw switch one- yellow light on. I threw switch two- all eighteen 
        amber lights on. (Triumph!) The switch for the eye camera crumbled to 
        pieces when I clicked it. It broke. It just plain broke. After all that 
        work. The very first time I show it to anyone, it breaks. I flunked out. 
        My monster died...</p>
      <p> "That's too bad," she says. "What are we going to do 
        for dinner?"<br>
        How can she think of food? I spent the remainder of the evening thinking 
        about wires and switches and lights. I had dreams about wires and switches 
        and lights. And the next morning I took the crumbled remains of the switch 
        , and drove to Radio Shack again, but they didn't have a switch that matched. 
        So I tried the hobby shop, and the guy there didn't have a switch that 
        matched, but he knew where I could probably get one just a few miles away, 
        out near the airport in the next town. Again, some kind spirit favored 
        me, because I drove to the next town out near the airport, and found the 
        store and they had the exact switch I needed and it only cost a dollar. 
        And I got it home and put it in and it fit and it worked fine. I felt 
        like jumping up and down.</p>
      <p> The only thing that remained was the gun. This has the most improbable 
        gizmo yet. The switch for the gun sight operates when it gets near a magnetic 
        field. That's why you mounted that powerful little magnet in the palm 
        of the left hand. When the hand gets near the sight, the magnet causes 
        the light to light. Get this- IT WORKS! (and my wife totally hates it!)</p>
      <p> So the trophy is on the mantle, and all the lights work. (you still 
        have to tap the foot a little) But other than that It is one impressive 
        figure. This guy makes every other mobile suit in the room look weak. 
        The matte finish plastic gives this imposing mecha the appearance that 
        requires painting or clear coating to achieve on other models. It has 
        the look of a miniature made for stop-motion use in a high budget Hollywood 
        film. It has the articulation for it as well. It has, by far the best 
        pose ability of any figure that I have. It can reach behind its back. 
        Every joint on the finished piece can be individually adjusted if it's 
        too loose, or too tight, and if you need to disassemble it (and you probably 
        will) you can easily do so. </p>
      <p> Overall I would give this kit an eight out of ten. Some problems I encountered: 
        The pre-cut wires are mostly too short to reach all the way to the circuit 
        box. I would like to have seen a double wire to thread through the legs. 
        Another gripe: No spare hardware. If you break one wire; If you lose one 
        nut, one screw, one bolt, you're out of luck. The broken switch was also 
        a great disappointment. And why couldn't Bandai throw in a couple of allen 
        wrenches?</p>
      <p> Despite the shortcomings, the HY2M Hyper Hybrid Model Glorious Series 
        1/60 scale MS09R Rick Dom is an awesome piece. The finished figure on 
        your shelf will make you feel like you've won an Oscar. But as cool as 
        the Rick Dom is, what you really get for your hundred and eighty some 
        bucks is the project. Building the Hyper Hybrid Rick Dom is as challenging 
        as a tough class at school, and as compelling as a murder mystery. The 
        guide book is first rate. It's like participating in a great science fiction 
        epic. It's an event that will pull you in and hold you captive. It is 
        greatly rewarding- every finished chapter feels like an accomplishment 
        to be proud of. It is hard work, but not beyond the range of anyone who 
        really wants to do it. This is the sort of experience that you'll want 
        to savor over a long and leisurely period of time- an hour or so a day 
        for several weeks- or only when the weather is bad, and you're stuck inside. 
        Yeah, right. Like you can eat one pistachio. Call in sick. Brew some coffee. 
        Tell your loved ones you'll be in seclusion for about 
        a week.</p><br class="giImageBlock-clear-both" />: </label>
 
</div>
</div><div class="flexinode-textfield-23"><div class="form-item">
 <label>Album link: </label>
 /gallery/Toys/Bandai/Gundam/Models/Hy2m/
</div>
</div><div class="flexinode-textfield-11"><div class="form-item">
 <label>Lead Image: </label>
 2426
</div>
</div><div class="flexinode-textfield-22"><div class="form-item">
 <label>Teaser Image: </label>
 2426
</div>
</div><div class="flexinode-textfield-12"><div class="form-item">
 <label>Image 1: </label>
 2426
</div>
</div><div class="flexinode-textfield-13"><div class="form-item">
 <label>Image 2: </label>
 2410
</div>
</div><div class="flexinode-textfield-14"><div class="form-item">
 <label>Image 3: </label>
 2414
</div>
</div><div class="flexinode-textfield-15"><div class="form-item">
 <label>Image 4: </label>
 2417
</div>
</div><div class="flexinode-textfield-16"><div class="form-item">
 <label>Image 5: </label>
 2420
</div>
</div><div class="flexinode-textfield-17"><div class="form-item">
 <label>Image 6: </label>
 2423
</div>
</div><div class="flexinode-textfield-18"><div class="form-item">
 <label>Image 7: </label>
 2429
</div>
</div><div class="flexinode-textfield-19"><div class="form-item">
 <label>Image 8: </label>
 2432
</div>
</div></div>]]></content:encoded>
		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Jun 2003 23:51:17 -0400</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>JWM</dc:creator>
		<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.collectiondx.com/node/690</guid>
							<category domain="http://www.collectiondx.com/taxonomy/term/29">2003</category>
						<category domain="http://www.collectiondx.com/taxonomy/term/92">ABS</category>
						<category domain="http://www.collectiondx.com/taxonomy/term/25">Bandai</category>
						<category domain="http://www.collectiondx.com/taxonomy/term/448">Gundam</category>
						<category domain="http://www.collectiondx.com/taxonomy/term/545">Gundam 0079</category>
						<category domain="http://www.collectiondx.com/taxonomy/term/232">HY2M</category>
						<category domain="http://www.collectiondx.com/taxonomy/term/515">Model Kit</category>
						<category domain="http://www.collectiondx.com/taxonomy/term/27">Plastic</category>
						<category domain="http://www.collectiondx.com/taxonomy/term/96">PVC</category>
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