Printable Scale Rulers?
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Printable Scale Rulers?
Hi,
Googling for a printable scale ruler in 1/35, 1/48 and 1/72. Would you have a link? I can't find nothing.
Thanks
Scott.
Googling for a printable scale ruler in 1/35, 1/48 and 1/72. Would you have a link? I can't find nothing.
Thanks
Scott.
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Yo, Rob. Why don'cha talk to John and make it an 'official printable scale ruler by Starship Modeler', with the SSM logo and all bells and whistles, in PDF, so folks can download it from SSM?
Are you building it in foot/inch only or in metric also?
Are you building it in foot/inch only or in metric also?
Sheer elegance in its simplicity.
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I think this is a pretty good idea.
But just what scale(s) would you put on it? There are the larger 'figure' scales (e.g. 1/12, 1/8, 1/6, etc.); the 'military modeling/gaming' scales (e.g. 1/20, 1/35, 1/76, 76mm, 54mm, etc.); the ''aircraft' scales (e.g. 1/48, 1/32, 1/72, 1/100, 1/144, etc.); and then the 'starship' scales (e.g. 1/350, 1/1200, etc).
Obviously, you could stick at least two scales per ruler and probably 3 or 4 rulers per PDF page...
If there's a choice of units, metric, please. Imperial is a hateful, hateful unit (or rather, set of units). And don't forget your european colleagues who print on A4...... please don't make the ruler(s) so large that they go right to the margins of a US-size page!
But just what scale(s) would you put on it? There are the larger 'figure' scales (e.g. 1/12, 1/8, 1/6, etc.); the 'military modeling/gaming' scales (e.g. 1/20, 1/35, 1/76, 76mm, 54mm, etc.); the ''aircraft' scales (e.g. 1/48, 1/32, 1/72, 1/100, 1/144, etc.); and then the 'starship' scales (e.g. 1/350, 1/1200, etc).
Obviously, you could stick at least two scales per ruler and probably 3 or 4 rulers per PDF page...
If there's a choice of units, metric, please. Imperial is a hateful, hateful unit (or rather, set of units). And don't forget your european colleagues who print on A4...... please don't make the ruler(s) so large that they go right to the margins of a US-size page!
"I'd just like to say that building large smooth-skinned models should be avoided at all costs. I now see why people want to stick kit-parts all over their designs as it covers up a lot of problems." - David Sisson
Ok, speak now or forever hold your peace.
Scales will be in: 1/20, 1/24, 1/25, 1/32, 1/35, 1/48, 1/60, 1/72, 1/96, 1/100, 1/144, 1/350, 1/700, 1/1000, 1/1400, 1/2500.
Any other scales people want? Of course the smaller scale will be lucky to get feet, much less 10ft incriments and your best best for output would be to find a pre-press house to print out some positives for you but I will be double checking the that the file will print nicely off an Epson C88 and will be in a pdf format.
Scales will be in: 1/20, 1/24, 1/25, 1/32, 1/35, 1/48, 1/60, 1/72, 1/96, 1/100, 1/144, 1/350, 1/700, 1/1000, 1/1400, 1/2500.
Any other scales people want? Of course the smaller scale will be lucky to get feet, much less 10ft incriments and your best best for output would be to find a pre-press house to print out some positives for you but I will be double checking the that the file will print nicely off an Epson C88 and will be in a pdf format.
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That's about as comprehensive a range as you could ask for. There are a couple of smaller ship scales (1/600 and 1/1200) but I don't think they'll be missed.
Three possibles might be 1/6th, 1/8th & 1/12th which are common for figures - anyone building a diorama or vignette might find these useful.
Three possibles might be 1/6th, 1/8th & 1/12th which are common for figures - anyone building a diorama or vignette might find these useful.
"I'd just like to say that building large smooth-skinned models should be avoided at all costs. I now see why people want to stick kit-parts all over their designs as it covers up a lot of problems." - David Sisson
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?Devin wrote:1/200!Kylwell wrote:Ok, speak now or forever hold your peace.
Scales will be in: 1/20, 1/24, 1/25, 1/32, 1/35, 1/48, 1/60, 1/72, 1/96, 1/100, 1/144, 1/350, 1/700, 1/1000, 1/1400, 1/2500.
Any other scales people want?
Apart from a few Japanese kits from the '70s I honestly can't think of anything in 1/200th. I won't complain if it's included, but......
"I'd just like to say that building large smooth-skinned models should be avoided at all costs. I now see why people want to stick kit-parts all over their designs as it covers up a lot of problems." - David Sisson
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1/200 is actually somewhat popular for airline modelers, and more importantly to some in this crowd, some missile and rocket kits. I happen to have a 1/200 scale model of the Hughes HK-1 "Spruce Goose" on the bench right now with plans to finish it in a "what-if" paint scheme. Personally, I'd find a 1/200 scale ruler quite helpful.
Pat A.
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And today I learned something. Thank you.Pat Amaral wrote:1/200 is actually somewhat popular for airline modelers, and more importantly to some in this crowd, some missile and rocket kits. I happen to have a 1/200 scale model of the Hughes HK-1 "Spruce Goose" on the bench right now with plans to finish it in a "what-if" paint scheme. Personally, I'd find a 1/200 scale ruler quite helpful.
"I'd just like to say that building large smooth-skinned models should be avoided at all costs. I now see why people want to stick kit-parts all over their designs as it covers up a lot of problems." - David Sisson
Could someone here give me a hand and print this one out and let me know how it looks? It's looking like a laser printer will do a sharper job than a ink-jet but I want to double check.
Ok, try it now.
Ok, try it now.
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I printed them at 100% on an HP laserjet 4000 (B&W small office laser). I made no adjustments. The result looks good to me. I can't speak for the accuracy of the reproduction since I don't have a handy reference. There may have been a wee bit of reduction. It also looks like the bottom was cut off since it came up in 8 1/2 X 11 and the bottom margin appears to be at the end of the page.
Pat A.
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- Pat Amaral
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I'm sure the quality of my printer isn't good enough to adequately reproduce this thing. I reprinted at 1200 dpi and the finests graduations on the 1/6 and 1/20 scales look blended (since that's the highest res on my box, I'd have to live with that). I was able to compare the 1/6 and 1/12 scales to a standard ruler. The half foot (on the 1/6 scale) and the 1 ft (1/12 scale) grads come out 1/32 short. I don't have a means to check the other scales but I'm sure this is across the whole page and is a reduction artifact of the printer. I don't know if any of this helps you.
Pat A.
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I was worried that those mm tick marks on the 1/6 wouldn't print unless taken to a pre-press shop. I may have to drop them.
That's the biggest thing I'm running into, printer limitations. Even with a 2880 printer it still acts like it's a 300dpi one. Mushes everything together. May have to generate a low res version for household printers and a hi-detail one for those will to search out a high end output device.
That's the biggest thing I'm running into, printer limitations. Even with a 2880 printer it still acts like it's a 300dpi one. Mushes everything together. May have to generate a low res version for household printers and a hi-detail one for those will to search out a high end output device.
Abolish Alliteration
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Great work - just a few comments...
I printed mine on an HP Laserjet 2100 - so nothing special - on quality paper, A4 size.
The 1/6 - 1/25 printed fairly well, with the possible exception of the 1/16 metric scale where everything merged a bit
The 1/32 - 1/100, again, prints fairly well, but on this one most fo the imperioal scales are just grey. The only metric one which does this is the 1/35 scale.
I also printed them on a Canon C4580 with much better results, but although clearer, some of the smaller divisions still mearge. Unlike the HP, the Canon has no scaling problem (it was about 0.6% short on the HP) and prints spot-on.
I think I'll be laminating these when I get home.
I printed mine on an HP Laserjet 2100 - so nothing special - on quality paper, A4 size.
The 1/6 - 1/25 printed fairly well, with the possible exception of the 1/16 metric scale where everything merged a bit
The 1/32 - 1/100, again, prints fairly well, but on this one most fo the imperioal scales are just grey. The only metric one which does this is the 1/35 scale.
I also printed them on a Canon C4580 with much better results, but although clearer, some of the smaller divisions still mearge. Unlike the HP, the Canon has no scaling problem (it was about 0.6% short on the HP) and prints spot-on.
I think I'll be laminating these when I get home.
"I'd just like to say that building large smooth-skinned models should be avoided at all costs. I now see why people want to stick kit-parts all over their designs as it covers up a lot of problems." - David Sisson
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Kylwell - you are THE MAN !!!
I'm sure that everyone will want to say a big thank you for your excellent work.
I'm sure that everyone will want to say a big thank you for your excellent work.
"I'd just like to say that building large smooth-skinned models should be avoided at all costs. I now see why people want to stick kit-parts all over their designs as it covers up a lot of problems." - David Sisson