tamiya or fujimi?
(_S200_)
08-18-2003, 06:42 PM
hey whats better tamiya or fujimi?
73superduty
08-18-2003, 06:44 PM
I prefer Tamiya, but Fujimi's enthusiast kits are pretty damn nice too.
Chris
Chris
TURBO_EK4
08-18-2003, 07:44 PM
Tamiya for quality, Fujimi for diversity.
:2cents:
:2cents:
hobbes874
08-18-2003, 09:46 PM
Tamiya for all around quality and Fujimi for the pure # of diffrent kits and accessories (sp?)
Vric
08-18-2003, 09:49 PM
Top 5 quality:
Fujimi Enthusiast
Tamiya (Hasegawa for old rally car)
Aoshima
Hasegawa
Fujimi
Fujimi Enthusiast
Tamiya (Hasegawa for old rally car)
Aoshima
Hasegawa
Fujimi
DJ RaYgU
08-19-2003, 01:40 AM
so wut are the bad things about fujimi kits?
BOOSTD
08-19-2003, 06:21 AM
Fujimi's kits just aren't as good quality as Tamiya's. There is nothing really bad about them, sometimes parts wont fit well or the resin parts have shrunk but you cant go past their range of kits. The best model manufacturer in my opinion is Tamjimi. These kits have the quality of Tamiya with the range of Fujimi :p
ZoomZoomMX-5
08-19-2003, 07:36 AM
Tamiya quality is far better than Fujimi, even compared to Fujimi Enthusiast kits. A high parts count in the Enthusiast line doesn't tell you that the kits take forever to build due to hundreds of little mold lines, sink marks, slightly warped parts, parts that don't fit just quite right...a lot of fiddling. Just looking at the mountain of parts trees wears me out, I know what it will take to do it right. Tamiya parts generally fit properly the first time, regardless of parts count. You can tell they use much higher quality molds than Fujimi.
Compare my last model, a Tamiya Toyota Celica curbside. It went together with zero modifications, and zero hassles. 8-10 hours and I have a beautiful, nicely detailed model.
The current model I'm working on is a Fujimi RX-7 Spirit R. I thought I could whip this one together quickly like the Celica. WRONG! :banghead: The rear spoiler is poorly molded, lots of mold lines and the engraved lines in the sides of the spoiler ends are horrible, and were gone after sanding the mold lines. The airfoil part of the wing has the ejector pin marks on the upper (visible) side. :banghead: :nono: :crying: :shakehead
Then I notice that I have to cut out the two inlets in the bumpers on either side of the grille, because the Spirit R doesn't have the fog lamps that are molded to the body. More :banghead: :banghead:
The rims they included aren't correct :banghead:
I have to use a set of my beloved (and impossible to get now) Aoshima BBS DTM's. :banghead: :crying:
I'll end up with a beautiful model, but after all the extra hours fixing their screw-ups, not to mention the fact that it will have cost double what a Tamiya kit costs because of their screwy price structure and my need for proper rims, Fujimi gives me headaches every single time :banghead: :banghead:
Fujimi taunts us. Lots of cool subjects, but very indifferent quality and ridiculous prices...:shakehead :nono: :banghead:
Tamiya spoils us, at least when they bother to do a car we like. :cool:
Compare my last model, a Tamiya Toyota Celica curbside. It went together with zero modifications, and zero hassles. 8-10 hours and I have a beautiful, nicely detailed model.
The current model I'm working on is a Fujimi RX-7 Spirit R. I thought I could whip this one together quickly like the Celica. WRONG! :banghead: The rear spoiler is poorly molded, lots of mold lines and the engraved lines in the sides of the spoiler ends are horrible, and were gone after sanding the mold lines. The airfoil part of the wing has the ejector pin marks on the upper (visible) side. :banghead: :nono: :crying: :shakehead
Then I notice that I have to cut out the two inlets in the bumpers on either side of the grille, because the Spirit R doesn't have the fog lamps that are molded to the body. More :banghead: :banghead:
The rims they included aren't correct :banghead:
I have to use a set of my beloved (and impossible to get now) Aoshima BBS DTM's. :banghead: :crying:
I'll end up with a beautiful model, but after all the extra hours fixing their screw-ups, not to mention the fact that it will have cost double what a Tamiya kit costs because of their screwy price structure and my need for proper rims, Fujimi gives me headaches every single time :banghead: :banghead:
Fujimi taunts us. Lots of cool subjects, but very indifferent quality and ridiculous prices...:shakehead :nono: :banghead:
Tamiya spoils us, at least when they bother to do a car we like. :cool:
DJ RaYgU
08-19-2003, 11:40 PM
Fujimi's kits just aren't as good quality as Tamiya's. There is nothing really bad about them, sometimes parts wont fit well or the resin parts have shrunk but you cant go past their range of kits. The best model manufacturer in my opinion is Tamjimi. These kits have the quality of Tamiya with the range of Fujimi :p
Haha, yea, there should really be a company with the quality of Tamiya and the quantity of Fujimi... that'll be tight! Also, is the Fujimi RE Amemiya Mazda RX-7 The Street Mu Greddy 9 kit any good? I mean, like, do the parts fit well and stuff. And is the Fujimi Inch Up lineup any good?
Haha, yea, there should really be a company with the quality of Tamiya and the quantity of Fujimi... that'll be tight! Also, is the Fujimi RE Amemiya Mazda RX-7 The Street Mu Greddy 9 kit any good? I mean, like, do the parts fit well and stuff. And is the Fujimi Inch Up lineup any good?
willimo
08-19-2003, 11:46 PM
Fujimi taunts us. Lots of cool subjects, but very indifferent quality and ridiculous prices...
Tamiya spoils us, at least when they bother to do a car we like.
I don't think anyone in the entire world has put it as eloquently as that.
Tamiya spoils us, at least when they bother to do a car we like.
I don't think anyone in the entire world has put it as eloquently as that.
Automotive Network, Inc., Copyright ©2025