man walks down the street in that hat, and people know he's not afraid of anything.
man walks down the street in that hat, and people know he's not afraid of anything.
Then definitely don't buy an RS Propmasters helmet...
I'd keep a Stormie RS helmet instead of 10 Anovos.
They didn't change the molding of the teeth from their previous version, just the painting correct?
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No, they kept the same teeth. The difference aside from the paint is how they trimmed it. If you compare it to their original version, the open-areas between each tooth was trimmed cleanly up to the edges of the teeth, like anyone building the helmet logically would. On this new version, however, in their attempt to "make it more accurate" by having a more rounded appearance like the originals, they didn't fully trim the excess plastic, but instead made the hole and rounded out the top and bottom.
The orange line is roughly where the maximum trim point. This just points out that they left untrimmed material to make the "rounded" appearance, which is incorrect
View attachment 757152
You can add bumps and paint drips to a clean helmet, but it is pretty difficult to take the bumps away when they are molded into the plastic.Well yeah, so would I, but if he is disappointed in the wonkyness of the Anovos, he'd be even more sorely disappointed in the RS. He said, "I don't need super screen accurate, but I was expecting more for $250," but screen accurate means bumpy, paint drippy, unevenly trimmed, etc. In this case, screen accuracy correlates to crappiness. Some of us, myself included, like that.
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If the originals had somewhat rounded teeth, how is the new version incorrect for not being trimmed straight? Maybe they are a little too round, but straight doesn't match the originals.No, they kept the same teeth. The difference aside from the paint is how they trimmed it. If you compare it to their original version, the open-areas between each tooth was trimmed cleanly up to the edges of the teeth, like anyone building the helmet logically would. On this new version, however, in their attempt to "make it more accurate" by having a more rounded appearance like the originals, they didn't fully trim the excess plastic, but instead made the hole and rounded out the top and bottom.
The orange line is roughly where the maximum trim point. This just points out that they left untrimmed material to make the "rounded" appearance, which is incorrect
View attachment 757152
If the originals had somewhat rounded teeth, how is the new version incorrect for not being trimmed straight? Maybe they are a little too round, but straight doesn't match the originals.
You can always file some material away if there is too much material.
It looks like the paint should get closer to the top and bottom as well.
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You can add bumps and paint drips to a clean helmet, but it is pretty difficult to take the bumps away when they are molded into the plastic.
If Anovos still offered the helmet kit, you could trim it sloppily as well.
I can understand some wanting the bumps of the original, but it doesn't make much sense to me that all helmets from the same maker have the exact same paint drip/chip bumps. They should vary from helmet to helmet. Other bumps actually in the original plastic, but not from paint, does make sense to be on every copy.
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Speaking of that, how would one go about fixing those teeth? Removing the backing mesh, and just filing the excess material away?
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If your helmet is anything like mine the mesh is just tacked in with glue and comes off easy. An exacto knife would make quick work of the excess since the plastic is really thin. While your at it might as well clean up around the eyes, too.
You could paint a white helmet with primer the green color, mask parts you want to show through, then paint the white. There is a tutorial on whitearmor.net in the Rogue One Build thread building and painting a Shoretrooper helmet. Similar techniques should work to make a beat up looking stormtrooper.Hey, I don't really want to start a debate but something I've been asking myself a lot lately as I would love to buy a really nice stormtrooper helmet is that there doesn't seem to be a really good offer to do either a really realistic stunt or a really realistic hero at the moment.
For me, it seems that this anovos helmet would be a good choice for a Hero helmet if you consider the material and the fact that it's cleaned. but they put the stunt teeth on it.
And the RS that everyone seems to be recomending to someone that wants something accurate also bothers me a bit because it's based on a stunt and has all of the bumps and stuff but is made of nice ABS white plastic like the hero. It seems to me that the hero should be smooth.
At some point RS offered a version which was made of that amazingly ugly green plastic, that you could paint and weather to make it look like a perfect stunt helmet but it doesn't seem to be offered anymore.
I don't really know what to be taking. especially considering that I would prefer to build it. (actually, I know what I want, I want that green RS, but it's not made anymore :cry)
Sorry, I don't know if this is appropriate in this thread as it wasn't really just about the stormtroopers.
cheers guys
You can add bumps and paint drips to a clean helmet, but it is pretty difficult to take the bumps away when they are molded into the plastic.
If Anovos still offered the helmet kit, you could trim it sloppily as well.
I can understand some wanting the bumps of the original, but it doesn't make much sense to me that all helmets from the same maker have the exact same paint drip/chip bumps. They should vary from helmet to helmet. Other bumps actually in the original plastic, but not from paint, does make sense to be on every copy.
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I'm not just talking about the forehead bumps. The original helmets are lumpy all over from multiple layers of thick paint, chipping, paint runs, abuse, etc. Molding the exact marks from one helmet into every copy is unrealistic if you compare a group of those helmets to a group of screen used helmets that all have unique lumps, chipping, paint runs, etc.You don't need the forehead bumps to have an accurate helmet. The sharpness of the Anovos cannot be taken away. It stands out like a sore thumb.
As far as the Anovos standing out for being overly sharp, is that compared to the overly soft versions that have been made by different makers over the years or to original helmets? I can see where it is somewhat sharper than the originals, but I suspect that was intentional because the originals were hastily made due to limited budget and time and look pretty poor up close.
Don't forget that Anovos has a costume license not a high end replica license. They aren't trying to produce an exact copy of the original props.
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