Building one item at the time...

Almost there… (stay on target)

Last night I finally got around to sand off the dome panels and paint them!

I found the secret to get rid of the spin lines quick!

First time around, I tried to just sand them in small circles with 400 grit. This didn’t seem to do anything with the spin lines.

After experimenting a bit, I realized that if I sanded along the spin lines instead of against, it went a lot faster and quicker!

A quick spray with my blue paint, straight on the metal, this is the result after having to wait a full 4 minutes or so for the paint to dry.

I also got around to finally paint my radar eye!

I actually painted it three times.. I painted it once, wasn’t happy with the masking, trued to sand off, and some paint peeled. I sanded off the entire radar eye, and painted again. Still an anomaly I did not like. This time around I sanded off just the front surface and gave it a new paint job. Looked great!

Next step was to mount all the blue panels.. and R2 looked a lot better again!

Since I had painted my second leg, I drilled up the ankle and inserted a metal tube in the pivot point and glued it in place with some E-6000.

I also decided to paint the screws to my battery boxes white, to make them more discrete.

This is the before image

And this is the after

From a little distance, it is nice and discrete!

I then spent a good few hours getting my arms mounted in my arm boxes, and my arm boxes mounted in the frame. It required a fair bit of carving, routing with my dremel, and finally go in with my metal cutter to cut off a big block of styrene inside the droid!

So… what does it look like at the moment? Well … feast your eyes on this!

Still to do:

  • Make end caps for second ankle cylinder
  • Wrap center ankle cylinders in aluminium tape
  • Make two ankle wedges
  • Mount Ankle Details
  • Mount Under Shoulder Details
  • Chamfer Main Foot strips
  • Weather Skirt
  • Weather Main legs
  • Double check new wiring

…. and done!

By |2016-12-06T00:00:49+01:00November 7th, 2012|R2-D2|Comments Off on Almost there… (stay on target)

Weathering the body

I know my fiancée wanted the droid to look clean and brand new, but a weathered droid looks a lot more real!

So, I calculated the odds of she liking the weathered look as opposed to me doing something totally stupid…. and went ahead and did it anyway!

I started with the pristine, clear coated body, now with all pieces mounted..

..and then started greasing up the body.

(the droid’s, not mine!)

So, without further ado, this is my weathered droid!

… got you!

This was only part of phase one. To get the colour and nuances where I wanted them. Next step was to go over the droid with rubbing alcohol (T-Röd for the Swedes reading this) and basically cleaning the droid up.

Not too much, since I still wanted it to look a bit worn, but enough to not look pristine and a bit used!

This is more like it, eh?

I haven’t done the skirt yet, I will flip the droid upside down when going over the skirt..

This is the back…

And finally.. a side detail!

So: two legs left to weather, and some light weathering on the dome!

Comments, please? =)

By |2016-12-06T00:00:50+01:00November 5th, 2012|R2-D2|Comments Off on Weathering the body

Last minute construction work

I was not all happy with my home made keyhole lock for my shims with my horseshoes. They never really kept them fully in place, and I had a hard time getting the shoulder hubs out!

So, I decided to make use of the leg to body hub, which basically hides most of the back of the leg around the top, and drilled and tapped for M6.

Three bolts going all the way through the leg and in to the horseshoe on the other side should be enough!

The bottom screws go straight into the thickest part of my horseshows, so they are really held in place firmly!

When screwed in place, it firmly holds the horseshoes in place and makes it even possible to use them while carrying the droid!

Second Pocket Vent:

Another thing I had that needed to be done, was my last pocket vent.

Again, I used my “can opener” technique described earlier when making this one.

Scoring the lines, then drilling holes in them

then using a pair of pliers and wiggling slightly before rotating the pliers and stripping the pieces off…

It makes the vent looking rather disastrous at first.. Oh my, can this really be saved?

Next step is to flatten this, and I made it with placing my metal ruler on top of the vent, and banging with a plastic hammer. This takes care of most of the dents, but the secret lies really in the sanding!

After sanding with my detail sander, first with 40 grit, then 240 grit, it is a bit gritty still..

Still pretty rough. Fortunately, wet sanding is my friend! After spending a couple of minutes with 400 and 800 grit, this is the result. Please note that I still haven’t even picked up a file to remove any irregularities after the “can-opener” procedure..

A little bit of filing, and then time to add the ribs and the pocket area.

The first few ribs go on…

After all the ribs were in place, last thing left was to glue the painted back-end to the pocket vent, and glue it in place in the body! Last piece to go into the body! Woohoo!

Ankle Cylinder Endcaps:

After the pocket vent was done, I started working on a small detail piece. My ankle cylinders are lacking the end pieces, as I’ve made the cylinders from scratch, and detail work is always fun and never ends, so I decided to fix up two end pieces.

This end piece is made from three layers of 3mm styrene to make up the big piece. This is sanded down and glued on top of a 1mm styrene round piece that I cut around a bottle cap and sanded down earlier.

A quick test fit…

Two of these babies, and then time for the secret weapon: Aluminium tape!

Wrapping these is not all that easy, but the results are not too bad!

And in case you’re not sure I made them myself, check the back of the cylinder..

Last thing on the construction front was gluing the fina pocket vent and side vent in place, as well as securing the doors on the front. Once that was done, I masked up the front center vent and painted…

Enough for one post, stand by for the exciting sequel!

 

By |2016-12-06T00:00:51+01:00November 5th, 2012|R2-D2|Comments Off on Last minute construction work
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