Sunday, June 26, 2016

Paint!



School and other projects have kept me from getting much posted, but we are nearing the end of the term, and I had some time to work on the ship in the last few days. I spent some time figuring out where the wires would go for the different lights, trying to avoid windows. Using greebles I glued in some guides to ensure the wires run where I want them. I also attached some tabs to support the white LEDs to create the overall window effect. The Kristal Klear came in last week and I tested it on some scrap (sorry no picture). It works well, so that will be one of the last steps before sealing.

wire guides and light supports on the lower saucer
wire guides and light supports on the lover engineering hull. I also glued in the shuttle bay doors as they have some special lighting needs.

wire guides and light supports on the upper engineering hull (which is upside down).

I also finished the texturing of the base. Overall I think it looks pretty good. Usually asteroids and barren rock moons and planets are different shades of grey. I worry, though, that with a grey ship it will become a bit to monochrome. I plan to try and bring some red and tan into the base to differentiate it from the ship a bit better.

The finished base

Another angle

After getting all the wire guides glued in I next mounted all the pieces that would have lights, save the saucers, and gave them three coats of paint. A primer, a coat of flat black to ensure the light does not shine through, then a coat of flat white to diffuse the light all around the ship. I need to paint on a second coat of the white. I did all of that with spray paint. I also sprayed the base with primer.

ready for painting
Primed and ready to paint

The lower saucer after the white paint
primed base

Later in the evening I broke out my airbrush for the first time. I mixed up some black acrylic and played with the brush on a box painted with the white primer. Mostly I was working on getting the feel for this new tool. Unfortunately it seems that the paint I was using had some larger particulate as after about 5 min of playing around the paint stopped coming out. I cleaned the brush with both water, and paint thinner, but no change. I then broke down the brush and discovered some blockage in the very tip. The hole is so small I cannot get anything in it to clear the blockage. After an hour of working at it I gave up. I have two new tips on the way from the company. I will just be sure not to use cheap acrylics in the airbrush from now on.

my first airbrush piece
 
Finally I spend the last few hours soldering the blinker circuits for the bussard collectors and the beacon lights on the saucer. I soldered the components to the socket made for the chip instead of a protoboard like I usually do as the chips will be inside the ship instead of in the base. The bussard collector chips will be in the nacelle, and the saucer chip will in fact be behind the navigational deflector in the secondary hull as that was the best place for it.

completed bussard spinner circuits

finished blinker circuit for the beacons on the saucer

I do have a small problem I need to solve. One of the nacelle halves is misaligned. When I dry fit it using the pegs and holes it is slighting off. I am not sure at the moment what I am going to do. I think the difference is small enough I can remove the pegs and it should glue together fine. If not I will have to do some structural rebuilding. We shall see. After that issue the next step is pretty much assembly, running wires, soldering the lights and all that jazz. That should be a long post, but I expect it may be some time before we get there. There is only 2 weeks left in the term, and I have another project that I need to have ready by the time we head to Medford after the term ends. 

misaligned nacelle
misaligned nacelle


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