Those look really nice Dave.
Thanks, Gents! Through a lot of mistakes, I think I'm getting the hang of things! Although FDM printing is never going to be as good as resin printing, it can come pretty close in certain areas! One thing is that you have to be patient! Slicing the layers on a model at 0.05mm layer height increasess the print time alarmingly, and slowing the print speeds does the same, but that's the way to get better quality. I've been trying to upgrade my original Anet A6 printer, so I can use that as well, but some parts are not easy to source. and that is still very much a work in progressnice and clean prints Dave, they look fabulou







And so you should be!I have to say I'm quite happy with the Guy armourd car..............

Blown up from 1/56 to 1/35 This is half of the hull for the Birch Gun, an 18pdr mounted on a Vickers Medium Mk.II chassis, it was the first proper self propelled gun & this in 1925! Sadly it was never developed further, as the British Army didn't see the need for such a weapon & was finally scrapped in 1931.
I hadn't altered any settings, so the prints are the same quality.
I'm not sure why the Birch Gun has taken my fancy, but it has, and I'm hoping all the work is going to be worth itAh, but I don't post all the mistakes! Today, I found that I had printed part of the Valentine Bridgelayer at a weird scale. Instead of blowing up the 1/56 model by 160% to give 1/35 - I'd blown it up by 286% ( ratio of 1/100 to 1/35 ) giving an odd scale of around 1/19! I'm amazed it hasn't happened before, I'm pretty careful about scaling things.It's all looking be tidy nowadays, Dave. You're consistently nailing them now
It's quite big - 260mm long in 1/35, but it's split into several build plate friendly partsNow that looks like fun!
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