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BUILDING A BETTER NARCISSUS page 2 |
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ASSEMBLY
My assembly adhesive throughout was Pacer cyanoacrylate Zap-A-Gap (gap filling
formula). When I build the second kit I have tucked away, I'll probably rely more on Ambroid Pro Weld for assembly. All seams, scratches, chasms, etc., were filled with 3-M Acryl-Red automotive glazing putty. For major rearrangements, and there were some, I used Evercoat catalyzed polyester resin glazing putty. Rough sanding and major erasures were done with 3-M 220-grit wet & dry paper used wet. Most finish sanding was done with 320 or 400 wet. Line scribing was performed with both Squadron and Micro-Mark scribing tools.
I try to build and detail my models to make the painting process easier, so the model will (as I like to put it) "paint itself". This
kit, as I've built it, is a pretty good example of that strategy. My assembly notes are listed in order of esthetic irritation, from most to least.
#1 "That Damned Nose" - part #s 25 & 26
- Overall Reconstruction
- Attachment Aligning
- Thruster Ports
- Side Correction
- Re-Scribing Linework
Definitely the kit's worst feature, it needs the most work. The kit's nose "as built" might, in retrospect, be better off scratch
built. However, following Olivier Carbourdin's procedure you will be well on your way to a better nose.
His method is a little complicated, but very logical and it works. In the reconstruction phase, the trench piece should be trimmed for length to occupy about 2/3 the space in length, rather than ¾ from the kit. This can be seen in a top view of the actual filming miniature: http://www.martinbowersmodelworld.com/Images%20from%20Alien/photo%20for%20articles%2029.JPG. However, I did not see this pic until it was too late for my nose. Also, leave off Olivier's "V shape plastic card" (Figure C), he
has said he didn't have a clear reference pic for what was actually going on there.
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I split the difference, erring toward the bottom being a little out-of-plane. Material had to be removed from the lower front of the
main body to allow the nose to angle correctly.
I drilled out the kit's two existing thruster holes (plenty distorted after the re-build) and installed a piece of ¼" diameter thin-walled
Evergreen tubing for each. The tubes were cut flush to the front angled face of the nose. I filled some of the ragged gap surrounding each tube with scrap styrene. The rest was puttied, then sanded
flat. I cut 2 rings from the same tubing (matching the same angle), and tacked them over the installed tubes. There are riffling marks shown on the front thrusters in the forced perspective front view model used in
the film. Skip 'em, they don't appear on any other version of the shuttle.
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All the existing scribed line-work on the nose is rather deep & wide compared to the rest of the kit. Since some of the angles of the
nose had changed with the new side pitch, the corresponding line-work needed to be moved as well. Excepting the very end with the thrusters, all the nose facets were puttied, sanded, and the lines corrected
and re-scribed. There is additional detail work (later), which ties the nose in more to the main body.
#2 Engines - part #s 8-12 (12 pieces altogether)
- Reshaping/De-Humping
- Filling Leading Edges
- Making New Vent Cowlings
- Rescribing Linework
- Nozzle Interiors
If I do this kit again, I might go for scratch-building the engines.
They are almost as bad as the nose, except that they'll actually fit on the model without looking TOO out-of-place. However, compared to the filming miniature and the full-sized exterior set, the model's housings should be straighter (side view), housings & nozzles should be more rounded or tubular (rear view), and need to have less of an obvious gap between the engines and body. Again, I followed Olivier's engine notes (and his figure G) to start.
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Where those soft-looking poorly molded rectangular shapes were sanded off should instead be smooth-but-crisp rectangular cowled vents which
are open at the rear. Both the miniature and the standing set have this feature. I built four identical vents out of sheet and strip styrene, tapered each toward the front and rounded over the front and side
edges to match what I could make out in the reference photos. After each was glued in place, I re-scribed the panel lines on the four engines.
All of the above (and the rhynoplasty) goes a long way toward making the whole model seem less squat and more sleek …as it should.
On to part 3
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