Mouse Vader
Sr Member
I'd agree. What do you think the white squiggle is to the right of that line, right above the end of the button?
I used a knife to scratch the surface, then bent it at that point to crack it in that spot.
(Without the scratch, the plastic will bend softly, instead of crack right where you desire it to)
Read this as authentically.Done poorly, because quickly
That's a great mockup, my eyes can definitely see those general shapes on the real one, nice job!View attachment 1054505
Here’s my hypothesis. Brass L hasn’t come in yet. Using the UH card
Done poorly, because quickly
check under the "control box" section in the first few posts of the thread.Fantastic übernerd research.Thanks, everyone!
Just out of curiosity - has anyone seen a higher-rez shot of the cave sabre's box interior? The Original Prop Blog's photo rez is obviously fairly low. The only other one I've seen is a book scan, and so has halftone rosettes. Thank you!
check under the "control box" section in the first few posts of the thread.
Thank you! Actually, that's exactly the photo I was referring to - the Original Prop Blog picture. It's fantastic, but if only it were 2-3x higher rez...![]()
Here ya go:That's great!!
I was thinking they must've made some sort of "stop" for the thing, when Luke pushes it closed in the cave scene. Nice job!
Although, how would that explain the shot y'all were just talking about, with the card sticking out the front? Or am I remembering the scene wrong, and Luke pushes it closed from front to back?
Might be worth reaching out to the owner to see if they could provide a high-res scan
Luke makes the “adjustments” inside the control box at two points, slides the control box closed from back to front with a (foley effect) ‘click’ (although very clearly, it has a stop). He then turns the hilt and his thumb over towards the black buttons; igniting it.
This simply implies in my mind that the box was freshly in working condition in the scene. The rails worked and were properly set/aligned, the stop
worked, and there was enough tension to keep the card in place during movement.
Compared to now.
Broken, displaced rails. misalignment allowing the card to bypass the stop. No friction and failed glue which has likely been re-glued.