Studio Half Scale TOS Enterprise Scratch build

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I'll be back at it tomorrow. Finished Foo Fighters last night. Got some ears to paint up today and ship orders.

No I haven't flown her yet. Waiting on the battery. Lots of pre flight work to do but soon.

Steve
 
Got back to her today. I should be on to the nacelles Saturday. New pictures tomorrow.

Steve

P1050811.jpg
 
Got back to her today. I should be on to the nacelles Saturday. New pictures tomorrow.

Steve

P1050811.jpg

I saw some talk of molds? any chance of a kit of this, it is fantastic always wanted a big "E" But just don't have those kinds of skills!! if you do a kit what kind of a price tag are we looking at? what a fantastic job you are doing.
 
Thanks a bunch for the kind words. This is to be a molded project and the kits will be near 1500.00. I will also offer them fully built.

Thanks again it's really appreciated,

Steve
 
Great job so far, love it! I just came across this thread this morning at work and read it all the way through, I can't wait to see it finished.

I was there with Ed Miarecki when he restored the Enterprise, Ed used black and white and color photos of the model for reference to paint it. The pictures were taken right after it was completed originally. I do remember him saying that the paint job was more pronounced than it looked on screen. The only part he didn't touch was the top of the saucer because it was never touched with the other, I think 2, restorations it had gone through. I remember thinking that the bottom of the saucer had too much shading but I was not a model maker only a machinist. I guess that I am not the only one that didn't think it was right.
 
Krisk,

Thanks so much for the post. Glad you like it so far. This is a by hand the old fashion way build just like she was originally built. If you were there you know what I mean. ;)


Thanks a bunch,

Steve
 
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Although I agree the restoration was a little heavy handed as to the weathering I dont want to see it redone in the near future. My buddy Steve Horsch was part of that and with his passing Id like to think that his work, like it or not, will remain on display at the museum.
 
Blimey, just realised that reading this whole thread has got me sat here still at 2.00AM. Mmmm, time for bed me thinks. :sleep

But first, I have to add my compliments to those posted so far by all the others. I love it when I see a craftsman at work, who has years of experience and skills to match. This is a superb piece of work and a pleasure to see coming together. Going to look fantastic when it's done. (y)thumbsup
Will be following the thread closely now I've found it!

Now, which of the thieving banks to knock off to raise the cash for one of these, he ponders....:lol (am presently laid low with long term illness so spare cash is now a rare luxury - but if I had it I'd be placing an order)
 
I agree, the 11 footer is in need of another restoration, one that will bring it back to 1967.

That will NEVER happen.

To begin with, what I've read suggests that details were added to the model up through the end of production on the Original Series in 1969.

Secondly, there are no reliable, detailed, high resolution color photos of the model as it existed at the end of the original series. Remember (a few posts above), Miarecki was working off of black and white photos! There are subtleties and shades of color that will probably never be reproduced because the quality reference material just doesn't exist.

NASM had the chance to photograph and document the model in full-color detail when they received it in 1974 but it never occurred to them to do so.

I agree that Miarecki overdid the shading on the model and that the present paintjob ranges from 'okay' to 'hideous' depending on your attachment to the Original Series. What the model needs before repainting is touch-up on worn decals, some fill-in and structural strengthening in areas where cracks are starting to form, and a better place to display it than the ground floor of the NASM gift shop! It might even be nice if they at least lit the model's lights for a few minutes a day at the start of open public hours.

Whether most people like STAR TREK or not, the USS Enterprise is an icon and deserves to be treated and displayed better than what the Smithsonian has managed for the better part of 40 years now.

Granted, the Smithsonian has its own budget crunches that it has to live within and a model may not get the priority that say a real-life spaceship or rocketsled would... HOWEVER, it's still an artifact of American pop culture history and inspired several generations of engineers and astronauts.

I'm afraid that most of the Powers-That-Be at the Smithsonian may not share that point of view or even be cognizant of it. Remember, these are the guys that royally !@#$%@#$@ed up the display of the Enola Gay around 20 years ago... That may have been another administration that was responsible for that foul-up but the politics and nonsense still exists for many things that the Smithsonian chooses to display or hold in storage from public view. They have other STAR TREK models and memorabilia that has not been on display since the mid-1990s...
 
Onigiri, I remember Steve but did not hear about his passing.
I now they tried there best even talking to the original creator/Model builder, I can't remember his name, (that is were the pictures came from) to get it as close as possible when first painted. It was weathered up over the years of filming. I watched as much of the restoration as I could while making metal parts for phasers. It was the best job I ever had!
 
Noddy,

Thanks so much for the things you had to say. As always it's very appreciated. And I sincerely hope you beat this illness!

Well not much to show today. I have been detailing the pylons and going over the blend from the neck to the engineering hull. To morrow this will be finished early on and I can move on to the nacelles.

Here's some pictures of today's work.

P1050821.jpg


What I did to get the grill recesses accurate is print out the plans to scale, glued them to .10 styrene sheet, cut them out with an exacto and glue those to the inside of the pylons. Sand. Blend the edges. Worked out great.

P1050815.jpg


Here's one nearly finished.

P1050820.jpg


These pylons fit the slots very well and nice and tight.

P1050818.jpg


Here's the blending of the two parts. Will final sand and primer tomorrow.

P1050819.jpg


And here's all the parts so far. One thing I need to get done besides the nacelles is that deflector. The friend that was going to CNC it for me can't until and couple of months down the road. I may attempt to lathe it on my buddies lathe we'll see.

Steve
 
Maybe I'm not seeing this in the images... but how are you accounting for the nacelle taper or the fact that the supports don't intersect the nacelles perpendicular to the surface?

The top of the supports was something I spent a bit of time working out on my build last spring/summer.
 
-The pylons just plug into the slots both in the hull and the nacelles. I'm working with accurate plans that are quite detailed with angles for all angles so it's a task made easy for me. Measure. Cut.

Steve
 
Okay... it must be an optical illusion then. It just looks like the supports are design to align with the center line of the nacelles in the images (rather than being designed to pass below the center line). I thought it would be noticeable, as it is in this image of the original...

support_cut-original.jpg

My eyes must be getting old.

Keep up the great work! :thumbsup
 
This gets better with each update :thumbsup

And I can't get over how much it looks like a giant plastic kit!
 
Mine too. But I want to point out how much appreciate observations like this as it helps me and keeps me on my toes.

Thanks so much,

Steve

Okay... it must be an optical illusion then. It just looks like the supports are design to align with the center line of the nacelles in the images (rather than being designed to pass below the center line). I thought it would be noticeable, as it is in this image of the original...

support_cut-original.jpg

My eyes must be getting old.

Keep up the great work! :thumbsup
 
Back in the garage with to finish off the secondary hull and the pylons today. Then back to the computer to size up and print plans to make the nacelles. They will be tricky.

Pictures later. And BTW. Forgive me if I posted this before in this thread but I don't think I did. This is an all CGI Enterprise model I built in Lightwave and animated as a test for another project I'm working on now. I'd do a thread about it as I building a wire frame set of the bridge too but I just don't think CGI models are appropriate in this forum.

Still... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kYZh4uv72Hk

Watch in HD if you can 1080 I still have a lot of detail work to do on her and I need to make some adjustments. Thanks to Doug Drexler and this practical build I'm doing I can see all the problems.

Steve


bridgerough5.jpg


bridgerough6.jpg


The unfinished bridge

captains_chair2.jpg


The captains chair.

1701_4.jpg


Early beginningsa of the wire frame.

scene3A.jpg


Near finished model.
 
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