METAL, PLASTIC, RESIN, Which is better?

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  • Опубликовано: 4 фев 2025

Комментарии • 41

  • @lucasharsh1396
    @lucasharsh1396 2 дня назад +1

    Never thought about minis in the car. Had them at work to go play after, and my old sculpt sanguinor had laid all the way over on his scrolls. I was able to fix it with a hair dryer, but always remembered after.

  • @Gorketh
    @Gorketh 2 месяца назад +1

    Metal is my favourite. I use an etch primer (SMS) followed by acrylic lacquer for the undercoat. I find that to be rock solid to prevent chipping; I dropped a white metal viking (previous mentioned primer + painted in oil paint), the hand bent but no paint chipped off.

    • @LetsTalkTabletop
      @LetsTalkTabletop  2 месяца назад

      Never heard of an etch primer! I'll have to look into that.

  • @thecasualwargamer5195
    @thecasualwargamer5195 2 месяца назад +1

    Best thing I found for metal models was regular car undercoat spray before spraying regular undercoat. Didn't even need to varnish the model after that.
    Personally I prefer the GW plastic but the poses and too many spiky bits means they get damaged too easily in transport.

  • @highmarshalkenneth3284
    @highmarshalkenneth3284 2 месяца назад +1

    I own some Forge World stuff and that is a pain in the butt to clean and paint. I have owned plenty of metal miniatures and have broke a few too. I like plastic the most.

  • @shaneflickinger
    @shaneflickinger 3 месяца назад +1

    That rooster crowing was hilarious and absolutely made my day.

    • @LetsTalkTabletop
      @LetsTalkTabletop  2 месяца назад

      Haha. I had to cut out about 1 minute of crowing, I kept trying to start talking and he would Crow again. I'm glad you liked it! That's why I left the first Crow in. LOL

  • @lucasharsh1396
    @lucasharsh1396 2 дня назад +1

    "And that's one of my chickens" not exactly what you expect to hear on the 40K channel 😅

    • @LetsTalkTabletop
      @LetsTalkTabletop  2 дня назад

      😄😄😄. I had to cut out several minutes of him crowing in the background.

  • @Magmaxyz
    @Magmaxyz 2 месяца назад +2

    Hard plastic minis for me

  • @MidniteCathedral
    @MidniteCathedral 2 месяца назад +3

    Gluing together resin, whether 3d printed or professional, can be a nightmare depending on the particular resin used.

    • @m.p.877
      @m.p.877 11 дней назад

      I used to believe that too. But I realized, the best glue for resin, is just resin itself. I just put tiny amount of the liquid resin with a toothpick or needle on the model pieces and harden it with UV Flashlight. Its immediately bond together perfect and strong.

  • @thebman80
    @thebman80 2 месяца назад +1

    Personally, I like metal figures, probably due to nostalgic reasons mostly. But if you use pins and magnets, that helps the flying apart issues. Plus, they are way easier to strip and repaint. Plastic can be a nightmare to strip and repaint, especially if you bought the figures 2nd hand and the person used some obnoxious paint on them, then they are basically trash at that point. Plus, they can last 100+ years which every other material listed wont.

  • @pforson
    @pforson 2 месяца назад +1

    Good video 👍
    One of the classic facebook arguments in which newer players claim that hard plastic is just the best, but as with everything in life, the truth is more nuanced.
    My opinion:
    Detail crispness: well cast resin (varies massively) > metal > plastic > poorly cast resin
    Durability: single piece metal > plastic > resin > multi metal
    Ease of use / conversions: plastic > everything else
    painting: plastic > resin > metal
    Overall I love one piece metal models, but hate multi-piece. Metal armies are also heavy to carry. As such, I like plastic as gaming pieces - easy to handle, light to transport and durable (paint never comes off). I like metal for nostalgia and as display pieces, and I find resin is a sort of compromise between the two, but varies massively - I would say my most crisp, highly detailed mini is in resin, but also my worst, softest, most warped mini is in resin!
    I have limited experience with 3D-printing, so have no opinion.

    • @LetsTalkTabletop
      @LetsTalkTabletop  2 месяца назад +1

      Yeah I think I agree with you on pretty much all of those points. Sometimes well cast resin can have very crisp detail that's fun to paint.

  • @Is_This_Really_Necessary
    @Is_This_Really_Necessary 3 месяца назад +1

    I do my own sculpting, molding and casting. I personally prefer casting in pewter because if I get a miscast then I can simply melt it down and recast it, something which you can't do with plastic or resin.

    • @LetsTalkTabletop
      @LetsTalkTabletop  3 месяца назад

      I never thought about that. Do you use a furnace?

  • @MajorSvenGaming
    @MajorSvenGaming 14 дней назад

    Metal... Easy..... Unless it's a big model, then plastic, but super glue some pennies under the base to help with the weight of the light plastic model.

  • @jeansteeler8831
    @jeansteeler8831 3 месяца назад +1

    I'm an outlier in this topic. I prefer resion, the hard and rigid type. Usually they require less pieces to assemble, and they are sharper in details compared with plastic. Sure, they are much harder to work with than plastic, but not that hard once you get the hang of it.

  • @DominatorLegend
    @DominatorLegend 3 месяца назад +5

    I personally like metal and how sturdy and heavy they feel, but plastic is definetly much much easier to work with.

  • @mattbrown5234
    @mattbrown5234 2 месяца назад

    I feel like the only one you missed is PVC plastic, which is similar to your thoughts on PLA. But overall this was a nice rundown of the different materials used for minis.
    Ultimately I think I prefer hard plastic for its combination of durability, workability, and detail. But honestly they all work well enough for making pew pew noises and pretending I’m 10 again.

  • @GilthosDrakoniss
    @GilthosDrakoniss 2 месяца назад +1

    👍👍

  • @jeffers1985
    @jeffers1985 2 месяца назад +1

    The old metal nids models we horrendous for breaking. Glued too.many scything talons in my life time as the raveners were top heavy and tumble

  • @YessikZiiiq
    @YessikZiiiq 2 месяца назад

    F, resin, I'm printing in Bort!

  • @KimKhan
    @KimKhan Месяц назад +1

    Be aware of metal minis in cold areas! Super glue bonds get fragile in subzero temperature. Many horror stories exist of an army being forgotten in the car in winter.

    • @LetsTalkTabletop
      @LetsTalkTabletop  Месяц назад

      I've never heard of that! Although I live in a somewhat moderate climate. It does go below freezing here but not for the entire winter. That's good to know!

    • @KimKhan
      @KimKhan Месяц назад +1

      @@LetsTalkTabletop It also serves as advice for anyone wanting to loosen up a bond with superglue if they wish to remove parts (or correct a badly placed bit).

  • @zacharyloflin3523
    @zacharyloflin3523 3 месяца назад +2

    Definitely prefer plastic. Too many metal minis that just don’t stay together. I have only recently started resin-printing, so the jury’s still out on that.

    • @LetsTalkTabletop
      @LetsTalkTabletop  2 месяца назад +1

      The detail on resin printing is second to none!

  • @calvanoni5443
    @calvanoni5443 3 месяца назад +1

    Lead in miniatures in America was banned for no reason. They still use it in the U.K. theres never been a case of ingestion of miniatures causing illness.

    • @calvanoni5443
      @calvanoni5443 3 месяца назад

      Normally lead is 12-13% of the mixture with tin, antimony or bismuth.

  • @earnestwanderer2471
    @earnestwanderer2471 3 месяца назад +1

    Plastic for me.

  • @auxlen
    @auxlen 12 дней назад

    Single peice metal is awesome but for everything else IMHO plastic FTW

  • @davidmartyn5044
    @davidmartyn5044 2 месяца назад

    Plastic is best for wargame figures, cast resin is also great but a little more fragile. 3d printed is for me, the worst for , say historic minis. Some companies are experimenting with their own resin, again, one reviewer had a completely
    broken figure in the box.
    I think 3d printing will hurt many manufactures.

  • @CherudexGaming
    @CherudexGaming 3 месяца назад +3

    easy answer: plastic

  • @CherudexGaming
    @CherudexGaming 3 месяца назад +1

    attach the metal lance arm to the old undead Black Knights (WHFB 6th edition) is TERRIBLE; also, the chaos raptors (WH40 3,5 edition), were impossible to make stand still, with their 25mm base and the center of balance 5 cm above the ground

    • @LetsTalkTabletop
      @LetsTalkTabletop  2 месяца назад

      Oh man, I know that black knights in plastic are hard enough to glue the arms on. I can't even imagine in metal.

  • @USALibertarian
    @USALibertarian 3 месяца назад +2

    I HATE metal. I'm not even sure why.

    • @LetsTalkTabletop
      @LetsTalkTabletop  2 месяца назад

      Oh man, I love metal. I'm not even sure why. I think it's the weight when you pick them up. Probably the hardest to kit bash with though.

    • @USALibertarian
      @USALibertarian 2 месяца назад +2

      @@LetsTalkTabletop I don't like the weight. So that probably explains the dichotomy.