The Good:
* I’m very pleased with the overall details and proportions. Looks pretty darn spot-on. The comms are the same width as my old ones, but the added length and accurate detailing makes them look more “right”. The model based on the resin comms looks a little too slender. The standard model looks good, but the thickness added to the Dummy Hero may actually look the most screen-accurate.
The Bad:
* These PLA prints are very, very rough. Lots of print lines, lots of flashing. This makes it difficult—particularly in the case of the tricorder’s moving parts—for things to fit together correctly without some filing and trimming.
* The axle holes on the tricorder are
TINY, with PLA flash partially blocking them. I managed to jam the steel axles through the flip-head axle holes, but the chip door holes were just too tough, so the door is just loosely set in place.
Fortunately, the flip-head action works great. And I dropped some brass grommets into the holes on the face of the tricorder. My measurements were correct. There’s no problem with opening and closing the head.
However, the tolerance on the flip-top axle is off, and so the head just flops around loosely. Gonna have to modify the axle diameter or the hole diameter. Alternatively, I could add holes for magnets to the design, to keep the head either open or closed.
* Because I can’t fit the axle through the chip door holes, I can’t properly test how it opens and closes. Gonna have to guesstimate when making tweaks.
* The data chip fits into the flip-head slot perfectly, but then it actually got jammed in the chip door…and I can’t remove it. I dunno if this is due to the tolerances being too tight, or because of the rough printing and the accompanying flashing.
The paint can is for scale.