I've not posted many Cyber Key fixes recently, mostly because the ones I've done (like Ransack, Evac and Crumplezone) were all basic Key-chopping jobbies, same as Skywarp. The others (Excellion and Override) developed into separate bashes in their own right.
But there've been a particular couple I'd wanted to fix for ages, but only yesterday got round to working out how... Sideways and Soundwave.
Sideways was the more complicated fix. The biggest problem was that he's basically Autobot by default; I needed a way to keep him in Decepticon mode without having to keep the mechanism forced in.
I wound up removing the spring from the slider and attaching a thumbswitch to it, so I could slide the switch forward to turn him into a Decepticon and trigger the blades, then slide it back to change him back to Autobot.
After taking the slider out, I attached a small piece of thick styrene to the back end, just long enough for the top of it to sit higher than the top of the cannon. Then using a diamond burr, I carved a slot in the cannon top, from the back through to the point where the front of the tab needed to stop.
After reassembling the cannon, I noticed that by sliding the switch forward, it only
partially depressed the release mechanism for the blades, so I took the slider back out and padded it with some pieces of styrene, which I glued on and filed to shape.
Once I'd made sure the mechanism worked properly, I made a thumbswitch, again from thick styrene. To try and stop it from standing out as a blatant add-on, I decided to make it into a pair of tail-wings. Once that was glued on, I painted it black, gave it a few coats of varnish (because let's face it, it
will have to deal with a lot of rubbing), and reinstalled it.
Voila!





I'd actually really like to work out how to make a second face for this guy; it seems off to have him switching factions, when he looks exactly the same for both of 'em. How he fools anyone, I'll never know.
Anywho... Soundwave was actually a bit easier, once I'd worked out how the switching mechanism worked. I was baffled by how the linear movement from the key activated the rotary movement of the door latch. Then I realised the key basically forced its way under the latch and pushed it round.
So, cut out the middleman, then. I made a lever using a strip of thick styrene (wondrous stuff), along with a little knob on the end (more for effect than anything), and glued this to the back of the switch (I use a
very good superglue).
Then it was just a matter of shaving out some plastic from infront of the switch, so as to clear a path for as far as it needed to move. I just shaved a chunk out, tested it, shaved out a bit more, and tested and so on, until there was enough movement to pop the latch.
Again, paint and varnish and we're laughing...






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By the way, I don't think you've heard the last from Soundwave...