Enlarging a kit through scratchbuilding
Moderators: Joseph C. Brown, Moderators
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Enlarging a kit through scratchbuilding
I'm thinking about doing this for an anime-style armored vehicle. Its current scale is 1/72; I'd like to create a 1/35, and I'm trying to wrap my head around the process, as I've never done it before. Can anyone perhaps provide or point me to an example?
I really wish I'd bought the blueprinting book that was available a couple years ago. It'd be a great help, I'm sure.
I really wish I'd bought the blueprinting book that was available a couple years ago. It'd be a great help, I'm sure.
Well, for one you have to multiply your measurements by 2.05714286. The big trik, that I know of, is accurate measurements. A good caliper is your friend. Just remember that calipers are only accurate to a few decimal places so measuring 2 or 3 times & averaging (on your original) is the best bet.
Measure, draft, cut, measure the final piece.
Yes, if anyone nearby has the Model Design & Blueprinting Handbook I'd borrow it.
Measure, draft, cut, measure the final piece.
Yes, if anyone nearby has the Model Design & Blueprinting Handbook I'd borrow it.
Abolish Alliteration
- Joseph C. Brown
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I've been working on a monstrous project that takes a 1/500 scale shuttle-type vehicle and enlarges it to 1/72, and then again to 1/48 scales.
Use the various scale conversion programs to determine what sizes you'll be working to, and create some good illustrations that can be enlarged to the final sizes.
Build to match the drawings, and that's essentially it. Easy to say, but the doing takes a while indeed...
Use the various scale conversion programs to determine what sizes you'll be working to, and create some good illustrations that can be enlarged to the final sizes.
Build to match the drawings, and that's essentially it. Easy to say, but the doing takes a while indeed...
________
Joe Brown
Joe Brown
Chuck's Modeler's Notebook page is still around. Email him to see if he has any copies left, or when it'll be reprinted. There's one on Amazon for $149 and change... which is just nuts.
If you have the 1/72 model in hand, you can use a contour gauge to get a cross section at various points that you can then trace or scan in, then scale up to 1/35.
If you have the 1/72 model in hand, you can use a contour gauge to get a cross section at various points that you can then trace or scan in, then scale up to 1/35.
- Chacal
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Meet your new best friend. Set the proportion once, every measurement from then on is automatically scaled.
Sheer elegance in its simplicity.
Political unrest in dictatorships is rather like a round of rock-paper-scissors: The oposition goes on denouncing the regime on the papers, the regime censors the papers, rock-throwing ensues.
Political unrest in dictatorships is rather like a round of rock-paper-scissors: The oposition goes on denouncing the regime on the papers, the regime censors the papers, rock-throwing ensues.
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I completely forgot about proportional dividers. I was going to get a digital caliper, but this might be easier. I'm figuring rounding to 2x should be sufficient, as getting a wholly accurate measurement to that percentage and transferring it to styrene might be a trick.
I have a contour gauge, but it seems to be designed more for using with wood rather than fine detail. I used it to create a replacement part for the U.S.S. Voyager, and while it got the job done, it seemed a bit "crude" for the job.
I have a contour gauge, but it seems to be designed more for using with wood rather than fine detail. I used it to create a replacement part for the U.S.S. Voyager, and while it got the job done, it seemed a bit "crude" for the job.
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I guess I should have been more descriptive. The pins in the contour gauge are fairly thick. What I need is a gauge with finer pins. I was hoping Plastruct would have such a gauge, but there isn't anything in their catalog. Mine's from good ol' Sears and Roebuck.
(Dayam, proportional dividers are expensive... at least the ones that show up on Google.)
(Dayam, proportional dividers are expensive... at least the ones that show up on Google.)
I have not tried this....yet. You could try making your own.
Good subject was looking at a couple of my own smaller models and was thinking about trying to enlarge them
http://home.att.net/~shipmodelfaq/ShopN ... iders.html
Good subject was looking at a couple of my own smaller models and was thinking about trying to enlarge them
http://home.att.net/~shipmodelfaq/ShopN ... iders.html
- Mr. Badwrench
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Even if you do get a proportional divider, you still shouldn't rule out getting a pair of calipers. Each has their own uses, I find calipers to be indispensable. For instance, when making multiple parts of the same shape, the calipers will tell you when they are all exactly the same, much better than the Mk. 1 eyeball.
I speak of the pompatous of plastic.
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This is the subject of my musing. I really have always liked this design. It's the second one I've owned; I have no idea where the first is. I've moved several times since I finished it as a teenager, so I may or may not still have it.
It looks like mostly flat surfaces, except for the turret. It looks more like measuring the size and shape of each surface, and the angles at which they meet. You could even cheat a little by borrowing parts from a 1/35 Puma or a BTR-60 (or -70 or -80) kit.Whiteraven_2001 wrote:This is the subject of my musing.
- SoundEffect
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Re: Enlarging a kit through scratchbuilding
My ScaleMaster application is capable of scale conversion. You know the kit scale and your desired scale. All you have to do is enter a measurement from the kit to get the new converted scale in inches, cm, whichever you're comfortable with.Whiteraven_2001 wrote:I'm thinking about doing this for an anime-style armored vehicle. Its current scale is 1/72; I'd like to create a 1/35, and I'm trying to wrap my head around the process, as I've never done it before. Can anyone perhaps provide or point me to an example?
I really wish I'd bought the blueprinting book that was available a couple years ago. It'd be a great help, I'm sure.
ScaleMaster is on my site here near the bottom of the page: MSFM ScaleMaster
It has also been donated to this site as well:
http://www.starshipmodeler.com/tech/scalemaster.htm
Stephen L.
Maritime Science Fiction Modelers
Maritime Science Fiction Modelers
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I plan on cheating a lot; the vehicle appears to have a lot of Soviet and German design elements, such as the upper hull that looks like the top of a German vehicle. From my perspective, the turret and wheels look like the most difficult to recreate given they're complex shapes. I'll probably use existing tires and fashion wheel hubs for them.macfrank wrote:You could even cheat a little by borrowing parts …
Here are Sprue A and Sprue B.
At least I'll be able to use better figures. The driver's half a mannequin, with ejector-pin marks on the backs of his upper arms.
Thanks for the link, SoundEffect. That'll be most handy.
- incrediblefruit
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Which printer/scanner do you have and which software also as it sounds like just what I need.I have a printer/scanner combo with software that can scale up/down. In the past I have scanned in some parts, especially if the parts are flat.
I now live in a deep dark cave with a 2'x3' worksurface in the kitchen, so pity me please.
http://incrediblefruit.googlepages.com/home
http://incrediblefruit.googlepages.com/home
Most 'art' software is capable of scaling - things like PaintShop Pro etc. You might need to "cut" a section of what you have onscreen, then adjust the properties - with MS Paint you can change the 'paper' size but I haven't yet found a way to change the image with it - unless you count using the Magnifier and taking a screenshot, then pasting that into a new image and re-magnifying until you get the size you want... not too helpful as you can only do factors of two, and you're limited by how much you can get on the screen at the time.
You might be able to find a cheap CAD-type package in your local "budget range" computer selection - I've never tried it, but my local PCWorld has (had, last time I looked!) a "design" app for £4.99. It looked pretty basic but it might be good enough for what you need.
I don't know for sure, but I would think most printer/scanner combos can increase & decrease the size of prints - basically, that's how most 'normal' photocopiers work, and a printer/scanner is basically a photocopier with a direct link to a computer as an alternative input to the scanhead.
Hope this helps,
Jeff (aka Captain Chicken. Often found floating near Tionisla in a cloud of wreckage. Grr.)
You might be able to find a cheap CAD-type package in your local "budget range" computer selection - I've never tried it, but my local PCWorld has (had, last time I looked!) a "design" app for £4.99. It looked pretty basic but it might be good enough for what you need.
I don't know for sure, but I would think most printer/scanner combos can increase & decrease the size of prints - basically, that's how most 'normal' photocopiers work, and a printer/scanner is basically a photocopier with a direct link to a computer as an alternative input to the scanhead.
Hope this helps,
Jeff (aka Captain Chicken. Often found floating near Tionisla in a cloud of wreckage. Grr.)
"No, no, no! We're Ethically-Challenged Merchants with Negotiable Morals! We are NOT pirates!" - Capt. Lauren Michaels, owner-aboard IMV Valkyrie