Nacells and pylons
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Nacells and pylons
Anyone ever have any trouble with keeping the pylons and nacelles at the proper angle? Just curious.
What happens if he does'nt survive, he's worth a lot me.
Use Legos or corrugated cardboard to build a jig to hold things at the proper angle until the glue dries.
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Models
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"The customer that spends the least complains the most."
- Johnnycrash
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Re: Nacells and pylons
Nope. I just leave them unattached and in the box. Never had any sagging or alignment issues.Enterprise01 wrote:Anyone ever have any trouble with keeping the pylons and nacelles at the proper angle? Just curious.
What Ziz said. In some cases with nacelles, you may need to add some weight to the front/back to help balance them at the attachment point on the pylon. That imbalance puts torque on the mount, and can lead to the issues. Of course now, with more weight, the pylon gets more stressed... Ugh!!
The LEGO jig is a really good idea. It's easy to make both sides equal. You may need to shim up the hull to get the nacelles/pylons at the right level to meet at the top of the LEGO, but... We all have enough jun... uh... stuff, laying about to do that.
And when you think the glue is dry... Wait another 24 hours. Trust me.
John Fleming
I know that's not what the instructions say, but the kit's wrong anyway.
I know that's not what the instructions say, but the kit's wrong anyway.
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- raser13
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brass bar is what i used. but i also added a little bit of thickness to mine to make it a little more accurate.
i love it when a plan comes together
http://s1015.photobucket.com/albums/af278/raser13/
http://s1015.photobucket.com/albums/af278/raser13/
It does sort of make sense that people would have trouble with alignment of warp nacelles...
One thing that was a head-scratcher is how from certain angles, the nacelles on the old TOS Enterprise kit from AMT or the one from Estes would often look like one of the nacelles is misaligned. You look at the model from top, bottom, side, front and back and everything looks OK. You take measurements and they tell you everything is OK. But if you look at the model from certain angles, the nacelles end up looking like they are splayed out or at different angles. Perhaps it has to do with the nacelles being cylindrical on the model, whereas the miniature had a taper to them.
One thing that was a head-scratcher is how from certain angles, the nacelles on the old TOS Enterprise kit from AMT or the one from Estes would often look like one of the nacelles is misaligned. You look at the model from top, bottom, side, front and back and everything looks OK. You take measurements and they tell you everything is OK. But if you look at the model from certain angles, the nacelles end up looking like they are splayed out or at different angles. Perhaps it has to do with the nacelles being cylindrical on the model, whereas the miniature had a taper to them.
Naoto Kimura
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木村直人