Brian Muir
Well-Known Member
A view of the back of the helmet from the test shots. What do you make of this - I have my own theory.
Brian

Brian
A view of the back of the helmet from the test shots. What do you make of this - I have my own theory.
![]()
Brian
this & this look way differentHere's a pic.
You can see that detail was formed separately then glued on. I believe the same for the above trooper back/cap.
![]()
.
Greeblie box just turned 90 degrees clock-wise from TIE to trooper.this & this look way different
but similar.
see the four signature details running left of the square running down
Greeblie box just turned 90 degrees clock-wise from TIE to trooper.
That's the same cap/back as all the others, except for the tie pilot/x-wing com pad laid onto the mold, most likely just a separate piece glued on that ended up not being used.
This detail also appears on a tie helmet we've seen. It appears on the very back of the mohawk where the little box usually goes.
.
Hey Brian,
I think it's extremely unlikely that it is part of the mold.
Surely it's not clear enough on that DVD to determine either way.
Even in the big pic I just posted, you have to really look to be able to tell.
However I can easily see how one could think that it was.
There is a separate mold that creates that piece as an individual part and it is used on other costumes as well.
.
Looks swooped to me, interesting back detail as well...
Thanks for sharing...
Gino
Looking back at the detail on the dvd I agree that it is the same. The only difference being that it is part of the casting on the test shot helmet rather than stuck on which means that at some point it must have been part of the mould.
The tie pilot details are as you say stuck on
Brian
OMG,
Not again with this nonsense.
They are all the same. Just difference in the photography that gives the illusion.
Especially on the one where the neck trim is angled downward like a V.
.
Exactly.
It's the same piece.
.