Inner workings of the arm showing the rubber cables and end joints.

For positioning the metallic foil sticker in the GN Condenser slot I use a plastic spatula tool found in a clay shaping set. I use it for its blunt edge that wont easily scratch the parts.

The clear plastic cover of the GN condenser will be pushed in the hole and will be held in place with friction. There you can see the quality of a Bandai kit versus a bootleg one. In the bootleg Gundam Dynames I experimented with, I actually had to glue the part in place because it kept falling off.

The metallic colors of Pylox are actually quite thick. Painting it on a joint part makes it difficult for the part to slide in place with another part. That’s where the mini round files comes in to play for me. I use it to remove the paint that seeped into the holes during the painting process.

Assembly of both arms, save for the hands, are semi finished.

Adding detail by painting over some parts with some dark metallic paint. A whole lot of masking tape was used to cover up an entire arm so that a minuscule part could be painted over… hehehe. For the major surfaces I use masking tape then for the detailed part, I use plastic sealing tape found in your local hardware store.

Here’s the final picture. I guess if you want it quickly done, you can just manually paint it on. But if you want the smooth finish that can be had by spray painting, its worth the trouble of taping.

The same thing was done to paint the white parts of the shoulders with metallic colors. I guess that’s one thing I didn’t like about the Kyrios, a lot of parts that had to be taped over and painted over so as to match the kit to its line art.

Part IV of this build is continued here.
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