Designing/Building a model Spaceship. help

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To construct a model of a futuristic spaceship for a school project, materials like styrene plastic and brass tubing are recommended for building the structure and details. Collecting plastic debris from everyday items and old model kits can provide additional components, while local electronics surplus stores offer useful small parts. Adhesives such as styrene glue and 5-minute epoxy are suggested for assembly. The design should allow for opening sections to reveal essential parts like the engine and hyperdrive. Overall, creativity and resourcefulness are key in the modeling process.
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For a school project, I may need to construct a model of a futuristic spaceship. This might be like something that you would see on "Star Wars". This model would have to open up to reveal the essential components needed for interstellar travel (i.e. engine, hyper drive, etc.)

How might i go about building this?:
- what materials should I use?
- what might the components look like?
- and so on...
 
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Mange said:
For a school project, I may need to construct a model of a futuristic spaceship.
I want to go to your school. :!)
Mange said:
This might be like something that you would see on "Star Wars". This model would have to open up to reveal the essential components needed for interstellar travel (i.e. engine, hyper drive, etc.)

How might i go about building this?:
- what materials should I use?
- what might the components look like?
- and so on...

I have a few spaceships kicking around. I start with a sheet of styrene plastic and build up from there.
For spindly projections, I use brass tubing from the hobby shop.
For components, I collect (or cannibalize) all sorts of plastic debris - toothpaste/shampoo caps. Also, kitbash old model car model kits.
Also, I frequent the local electronics surplus store. You can pick up handfuls of tiny fiddly components that look great stuck on.
Glue: styrene glue and 5-minute epoxy glue.

See attached pic. (BTW, all those panels tilt about 60 degrees in any direction on universal joints.)
 

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Thusly.
 

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well thank you so much sir
 
bubba3222 said:
Styrene is the best way to go along with maybe some clear PETG sheet. They are both great in forming and modeling. I use styrene a lot with various projects specifically my train layout. It's great for backgrounds and making models cars, stuff like that. Give this website that I found a try. I have bought stuff from them before and seemed to have a lot of materials for modeling that could help you. Good luck! http://bit.ly/oKIR89

Well, you're about a year and a half late, but...
 
DaveC426913 said:
Well, you're about a year and a half late, but...

Good thing, because otherwise I'd never have seen this way cool spaceship! :smile:
Pity the OP did not report back with his spaceship.

However, the parts seem to be improperly named...
I'd have expected a hyper-drive, quantum-teleporter, matter-converter, holo-simulator, ... :wink:
 
I like Serena said:
Good thing, because otherwise I'd never have seen this way cool spaceship! :smile:

Thanks.

I am rather proud of it. It's actually the second time I built it. The first one sort of disintegrated over time. So I rebuilt it. (That is no mean feat for someone who has difficulty completing a project the first time let alone the second.)

Alas, my career just did not go in that direction. Not sure why.
 
DaveC426913 said:
Alas, my career just did not go in that direction. Not sure why.

Neh, neither did mine.
 
I like Serena said:
Neh, neither did mine.

John Dykstra of Star Wars fame was my hero. I think I may have set my goal too high.

Say, is that a LEGO Escher staircase? Is it yours?
 
  • #10
DaveC426913 said:
John Dykstra of Star Wars fame was my hero. I think I may have set my goal too high.

Say, is that a LEGO Escher staircase? Is it yours?

Right the first time! :smile:
But no, I'm sorry to say that it's not mine.
 

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