The only way to make that car more of a true cockpit would be centering the driver right to left.It;s just something about that dashboard....
The only way to make that car more of a true cockpit would be centering the driver right to left.It;s just something about that dashboard....
Yes, the rear co-pilot had two either side of his leg area. This is the only photo i know of that shows them. I bought some Chinese copies from Dubai of all places.Do you know and may be you have a picture where the Safari 600 was used in the Snowspeeder?View attachment 1729045
In manufacturing, the big red buttons show up in pairs to keep people with two arms from placing one of them in the way of moving machinery or to stop the operator from accessing two mutually exclusive operations (controls) simultaneously. Sure, you shouldn't be able to retract the wheels while taxiing to the dock but given four seconds unsupervised, any newb can get it done. If the operator can reach the dangerous part of the machine, the two buttons are needed to not only start the process but to keep it going. Mayhaps, no one could trust these young pilots to not launch missiles while inside the docking bay (Anakin) so they created a two button taxiing system that releases the parking brake for towing to the launch area.The BIG RED BUTTONS. No idea what they do but they must be important as they are big and red. Two either side of the dashboard. As soon as i saw these buttons i knew the bottom of an energy drink can was going to be perfect. I cut that to size, filled it with resin so it is nice and solid then buffed the paint off it. The red button is an office magnet with the magnet removed and i resined a bolt that would hold it all together. The larger red circle is just resin poured into my shaving foam lid and painted red. A small section of aluminium clipped onto the back.
I do note that these buttons did vary in the hanger shots so i went with the version in Lukes speeder.
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In the bottom picture, the shelf in the background looked like a side cubby. I thought, "If I had a snow speeder for even one week, I would have about the same amount of crap in the door cubby."Started the side control panels. The available reference shots here are so obscure. The ones either side of the chair are a bit of a mystery so i have had to take artistic licence for those ones. The top facing ones will be aluminium but the side ones are foam board as they have so much detail it was easier to cut them than to try to CNC aluminium ones. Paint is a Matt black with a Tamiya (TS-30 silver leaf) and some detailing with a Posca paint pen. Quite happy with the results.
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Lol! I did the same thing - thought it was a long pocket and being used to store materials for construction!In the bottom picture, the shelf in the background looked like a side cubby. I thought, "If I had a snow speeder for even one week, I would have about the same amount of crap in the door cubby."
Just another sequence of making the panels. Foam cut to shape, painted and glued. This is far easier than trying to mask the various shapes for painting. Ill be adding some lighting details like the red strip below.
I think the panels on Luke's left (Bottom pic, top panel) is used four times and must be a real world part because on the other side it is flipped. Maybe from a record player?
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Yes, you could be right. Im sure somebody will discover what it is one day... I found these few images of 1970 stereos, "close but no cigar"I don't think it is a real world part unless only the left side is. The overall shape of the full panel is exactly the dimensions of the one below it (the one you already completed). On the right side the 7 sequencial boxes match the same sequence of the panel below it but position vertically center...
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Short hole, five long and another short. Similar in upper and lower panels. In a real vehicle they could very well be heater vents and defrost.
I think they were filling space and making up some dummy panels. I believe they used the same panel as below but dressed it with a center strip of random project lights from Radio Shack. I say this only because the colors are random and stereo equipment, even from the past, showed more design finesse and color coordination than that.
I would, however, not be surprised if it is a button or light panel from something like a helicopter in the real world. Military stuff was always Radio Shacky looking.
Serious actual physical goosebumps. This is really getting some ra ra today. Standout work. When I look at this most recent addition, I can feel it move.One wing section completed. Still have to skin the underside. Lucky had the help of a few friends to help as this section is large and awkward to move. The front angle matched up perfectly so very happy with that.
A little more internal bracing and work out the landing gear, which will have to sit more forward than the scale models and toys as the whole thing is quite unstable as a triangle.
The big shackle in the wing is temporary so i can keep it raised to work on the underside.
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