The designs I'm using this time are:-
- USS Enterprise-D by Paragon
- USS Pasteur by Zosho and
- negh'var by Wulf111.
I wasn't at all confident about being able to build the spherical
section this small so I made sure that I could before posting anything. I
tried to take Revell-fan's advice about using a similar sized solid
ball to shape the sphere; unfortunately I couldn't find anything so I
used my fallback option of blu tac and it turned out pretty well. With
that done I cut the next most fiddly parts:-
I built all the wee boxes that these parts were for and then cut the secondary hull parts:-
Although I've shown one of the internal supports, I didn't actually need
them as the secondary hull doesn't have any 'give' when it's 4mm wide. I
also ditched the edges of the nacelle struts as a double thickness of
card was sufficient. That left the nacelles to build:-
These were quite tricky wee devils; curving the outer edges was murder
and there was a tiny bit of slippage on some surfaces. However, I got
her finished and she looks not too shabby at all at 41mm:-
Next up is the future Enterprise-D starting as always with the saucer:-
This one will be a bit larger
than the last Enterprise build to keep it in scale with the Pasteur. It
should be around the 3" mark when it's finished.
I joined the pieces for the upper and lower saucer halves then cut the pieces for the rim, bridge and impulse engines:-
I omitted the windows as they were just too small for me to be
comfortable working with. One slight slip and the whole saucer would be
ruined and the smallest windows are less than 1mm wide so...
With the saucer complete I cut the parts for the secondary hull:-
With the saucer complete I cut the parts for the secondary hull:-
I left one piece uncut as I'll have to connect the deflector first; from
experience I found that this piece tends to split when PVA is applied.
All the tiny insets have been done. My paper strip method of connection is proving to be time consuming as usual, and there is still a lot of work to be done on the secondary hull. I also spent an age on parts which turned out to be for the interface when the saucer separates! So while the PVA was drying I've cut some more parts for the nacelles:-
All the tiny insets have been done. My paper strip method of connection is proving to be time consuming as usual, and there is still a lot of work to be done on the secondary hull. I also spent an age on parts which turned out to be for the interface when the saucer separates! So while the PVA was drying I've cut some more parts for the nacelles:-
I'll be replacing the parts for the bussard collectors with reddened blu
tac - I'm building at approximately 1/4 the size this model was
intended to be and blu tac works better for me at this scale. If the
insets on the nacelles prove too challenging I'll be omitting them as
well - fortunately, I've printed the page twice so I have a fallback
option.
Instead of insetting the blue parts, I overlayed my extra grey parts to achieve an inset effect on the nacelles. I also cleaned up the lines on the neck and made the wee modification boxes before cutting the last of the parts:-
Instead of insetting the blue parts, I overlayed my extra grey parts to achieve an inset effect on the nacelles. I also cleaned up the lines on the neck and made the wee modification boxes before cutting the last of the parts:-
Joining the two halves of the secondary hull proved to be a huge
wrestling match which took ages to complete as I was only able to join a
couple of mm's at a time. I worked from front to back, pushing the
deflector forward to get the fit flush at the front. I still finished
with a bit of an overhang at the rear end, but since I'm talking about a
fraction of a mm I suppose it's negligible
. The bit that wasn't negligible was the curvature of the nacelle struts misaligning - tiny errors in cutting parts can lead to huge problems with alignment and symmetry!
I eventually worked out the positioning of the parts for the underside of the saucer after careful scrutiny of some images I found in interwebland:-
I eventually worked out the positioning of the parts for the underside of the saucer after careful scrutiny of some images I found in interwebland:-
I would assume that this modification wasn't built over the captain's
yacht port, but rather replaced it, so I'd suggest omitting the yacht
layers if you're thinking of building this version.
I then moved on to the support for the third nacelle:-
I then moved on to the support for the third nacelle:-
Spending time on insetting the detail on the rear of the neck has proven
to be an exercise in futility, since it was all covered by the extra
impulse engines
.
I'm hoping the the bases for the other two nacelles will cover up the
mess that the top of the struts currently is. I'll also need to rework
the strut for the third nacelle - at full size the part is awesome; at
this size I can't really work with the pinprick-sized detailing...
The last piece of the third nacelle strut did pose a slight problem. I got round this by packing the inside with four thicknesses of cut-off card and trimming round the outline with a modelling knife. This will only work if you're building your model 3" in length - at larger scales the original piece should be able to be folded into shape. For the detail on top of the nacelles I omitted the brown edging as I felt that a single thickness of card would be enough, but I used my spare printout to double the thickness of the black central line. The guns and gunmounts were another challenge, particulary because the section which was glued to the saucer was miniscule - lol. Long fingernails are a nuisance for playing the bass, but are very useful when working with a tiny wee bit of card with three folds in it!
The last piece of the third nacelle strut did pose a slight problem. I got round this by packing the inside with four thicknesses of cut-off card and trimming round the outline with a modelling knife. This will only work if you're building your model 3" in length - at larger scales the original piece should be able to be folded into shape. For the detail on top of the nacelles I omitted the brown edging as I felt that a single thickness of card would be enough, but I used my spare printout to double the thickness of the black central line. The guns and gunmounts were another challenge, particulary because the section which was glued to the saucer was miniscule - lol. Long fingernails are a nuisance for playing the bass, but are very useful when working with a tiny wee bit of card with three folds in it!
So here's the finished 3" triple-nacelled USS Enterprise D alongside the USS Pasteur:-
Now for the negh'vars. I can't find any instructions for this one so I'm kinda working in the dark a bit - destructions shouldn't be a problem though - lol
. I've cut the parts for the main superstructure:-
There seem to be plenty of reference photos around so I'll be using some of them as a guide.
A few more pieces are cut, but I have absolutely no idea where these parts go!
A few more pieces are cut, but I have absolutely no idea where these parts go!
with the exception of the impulse boosters. I've joined up what I can
and by a process of elimination I'll eventually work out what the other
bits are. In the meantime, I've completed the superstructure and cut the
parts for the bridge:-
Having found some detailed reference pics for a negh'var I now know where the mystery pieces go
.
Unfortunately, the impulse boosters should have been connected to those
'T' pieces rather than directly to the hull so it's just as well that I
printed extras of the design. I also had a look in the Klingon files on my flash drive and there were the instructions!
With the impulse boosters attached properly I cut some parts for the hangar deck:-
I'm back into fiddly territory - the bevel is ~0.5mm thick and I'm
having to use my fingernails to fold the protruding wee boxes (the
schematics don't tell us what they are...). With the front triangle
built I moved to the rear of the deck:-
and joined it along with the lower section I'd already built, before cutting the pieces for the front of the crew quarters:-
I'm doing my edge colouring after gluing the pieces together as the PVA
combines with the ink in the green pen I'm using and causes it to leech
very badly.
I've joined up the front of the crew quarters and cut the parts for the rear:-
I've joined up the front of the crew quarters and cut the parts for the rear:-
I then connected both halves and cut the base and wing chevron sections:-
The instructions are given from the top working down to the
superstructure; I prefer working out from the superstructure to avoid
having lots of modules lying around waiting to be connected, especially
when they're so small that a breath can blow them away!
With all the modules for the rear of the dorsal side built I could then connect them all and join them to the superstructure:-
With all the modules for the rear of the dorsal side built I could then connect them all and join them to the superstructure:-
The modules for the front had previously been built (before I
rediscovered the instructions) and were also connected. I then started
cutting parts for the ventral side:-
Once again the instructions are working from the outside in, so I have more modules lying around waiting for their base:-
The bulk of the underside is done and I then moved on to the nacelles for the underside:-
I joined all the parts for the lower nacelle and attached the nacelles
to the underside. Work was then begun on the upper halves of the
nacelles:-
With the front sections joined up, I cut the parts for the rear sections:-
This is a very time-consuming build due to all the tiny modules that
have to be separately built because of their different widths. Wulf111's
attention to detail is superb, although I have omitted quite a few pieces as they are pretty much redundant when building the model this small.
I joined the parts for the rear of the upper nacelles, connected the halves and fixed them to the wings. I then tried to make tubes of the parts for the disruptors and failed miserably! Instead I decided to use wire with the larger diameter parts wrapped around them:-
I joined the parts for the rear of the upper nacelles, connected the halves and fixed them to the wings. I then tried to make tubes of the parts for the disruptors and failed miserably! Instead I decided to use wire with the larger diameter parts wrapped around them:-
The version of negh'var used in "All Good Things" doesn't have any more
attachments on the underside so one page of parts was redundant. The
almost finished negh'var (voodieh, I believe) looks like this:-
This is the one which will be blown up by the Ent-D. The other one has a
fibre optic filament threaded through it's centre and the parts for the
forward disruptor have been wrapped around this filament. I'll also be
adding extra detailing in the form of raised panels on a few sections - I
didn't feel that it was really necessary to add this detailing to the
one that's going to be destroyed.
Now that the lead ship is built, it's time to take it apart again:-
Now that the lead ship is built, it's time to take it apart again:-
The head and the port wing have flickering LEDs inside them - there
isn't room in the starboard wing. Three main cuts gave me four large
chunks of ship and I then made smaller contouring cuts to the exposed
edges. All the internal layers had to be removed to make space for the
bulbs. I used my usual method of filling open areas with damage printed
paper, crumpled up and pushed into the gaps and cracks. I'm going to
leave the port nacelle buckled and connect the rear of the starboard
nacelle with a bit of wire. The fourth chunk (not shown) will be minced
to make a central debris field and I'm going to try an experiment with a
capsule of clear plastic, another LED and some cotton wool to simulate
a massive explosion.
I connected the LED wiring inside the capsule of plastic and encased it in a very thin layer of cotton wool which I teased out a bit here 'n' there. When that was done I joined up the three main chunks with wire and pierced the port wing to hold a stand. The plastic capsule was also pierced to give stability to the fibre optic filament for the Ent-D - I'll be adding an additional filament or two and threading them through to a red LED (yellow LEDs are rubbish for phasers!). The minced central chunk was filled with damage printed paper and the bits were strategically placed before I finished the explosion by scattering tiny pieces of copper wire and metal flakes over the cotton wool:-
I connected the LED wiring inside the capsule of plastic and encased it in a very thin layer of cotton wool which I teased out a bit here 'n' there. When that was done I joined up the three main chunks with wire and pierced the port wing to hold a stand. The plastic capsule was also pierced to give stability to the fibre optic filament for the Ent-D - I'll be adding an additional filament or two and threading them through to a red LED (yellow LEDs are rubbish for phasers!). The minced central chunk was filled with damage printed paper and the bits were strategically placed before I finished the explosion by scattering tiny pieces of copper wire and metal flakes over the cotton wool:-
And without the camera flash:-
Using the remaining packing I had from my Asterix the Gaul flash drives I
was able to simulate the look of the shields around the Pasteur:-
A piercing in the plastic holds the voodieh disruptor fibre optic quite nicely.
I added an extra layer for the red plates on the top and bottom of the voodieh's wings:-
I added an extra layer for the red plates on the top and bottom of the voodieh's wings:-
and also for the green plates on it's head:-
So everything is in it's final position waiting for the Ent-D's phaser to be added:-
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