137th Gebirg
Well-Known Member
Hello, all:
Not so much a studio-scale model topic, but a topic inspired by one.
It's been 11 years since I did the first set of schematics for the TOS Galactica (which I dubbed the "Nova" class for lack of a better named) by hand using a pencil, ruler, and my well-scrubbed VCR recordings of the original series. Sadly, the web was in its infancy at the time and good source material was really impossible to come by. Nobody knew where the original studio model was and all I had to go on were some grainy pics and my Revellogram model, which as most people know was riddled with errors. The schematics that were born from that model contained the same glaring errors.
Lately, I've had a wild hair to revisit the schematics (especially after having seen my old orthos appear in photos taken at the CIC set of the new show) and create the most accurate full 6-view set of orthos I could build using Adobe Illustrator CS1. I went to Jim Creveling's site, containing very detailed pictures of his unbelievably fantastic 1:1 studio "miniature" of the Big G. As photos of the original filming model are damn near impossible to find (still!) this was my best shot at an authentic layout. I painstakingly assembled a mosaic the different photos he has on his site of the model, trying to take into account perspective distortion. The result follows:
-- Link removed - no longer needed --
For comparison’s sake, here’s my original set of schematics from 1996:
http://img403.imageshack.us/img403/7915/battlestarnovaqm0.gif
And here is a preview of the new schematics. Had to make some tweaks to the port profile to make it orthographically reconcile with the dorsal (top) view, which is now about 80% done. Some more tweaking will be needed, particularly with the top-aft section of the engine module. I tell ya, perspective distortion is a real pill. Anyways, the dorsal view is about 80% done. I still need to fill in some asymmetrical detailing on both sides and finish the neck and shuttle bay armatures. I'm waiting on some photo information from the builder of the model to fill in those details. I don't want to eyeball or guess on these things. In any case, here's the new preview. Enjoy!
-- Link removed - no longer needed --
Not so much a studio-scale model topic, but a topic inspired by one.
It's been 11 years since I did the first set of schematics for the TOS Galactica (which I dubbed the "Nova" class for lack of a better named) by hand using a pencil, ruler, and my well-scrubbed VCR recordings of the original series. Sadly, the web was in its infancy at the time and good source material was really impossible to come by. Nobody knew where the original studio model was and all I had to go on were some grainy pics and my Revellogram model, which as most people know was riddled with errors. The schematics that were born from that model contained the same glaring errors.
Lately, I've had a wild hair to revisit the schematics (especially after having seen my old orthos appear in photos taken at the CIC set of the new show) and create the most accurate full 6-view set of orthos I could build using Adobe Illustrator CS1. I went to Jim Creveling's site, containing very detailed pictures of his unbelievably fantastic 1:1 studio "miniature" of the Big G. As photos of the original filming model are damn near impossible to find (still!) this was my best shot at an authentic layout. I painstakingly assembled a mosaic the different photos he has on his site of the model, trying to take into account perspective distortion. The result follows:
-- Link removed - no longer needed --
For comparison’s sake, here’s my original set of schematics from 1996:
http://img403.imageshack.us/img403/7915/battlestarnovaqm0.gif
And here is a preview of the new schematics. Had to make some tweaks to the port profile to make it orthographically reconcile with the dorsal (top) view, which is now about 80% done. Some more tweaking will be needed, particularly with the top-aft section of the engine module. I tell ya, perspective distortion is a real pill. Anyways, the dorsal view is about 80% done. I still need to fill in some asymmetrical detailing on both sides and finish the neck and shuttle bay armatures. I'm waiting on some photo information from the builder of the model to fill in those details. I don't want to eyeball or guess on these things. In any case, here's the new preview. Enjoy!
-- Link removed - no longer needed --
Last edited: