Triak Starfighter Build, Part 2

As with any airplane model, you start with the insides. Here I used the wheel well turned upside down for the seat bucket. Then added details to the side walls as needed. In looking back at this build after I put the fuselage together, I completely forgot to include a block of aluminum tapped for the 1/4 20 screw mounts. I would up just super gluing a mount into a huge hole I drilled on the bottom. Completely crude, but it can be photo shopped out.

20151216_071438

I fixed the engine nacelles to the air intakes from the Tomcat model with simple wood screws inside. Then covered the screw heads with air intake pieces from the F-104 model. As with any scratch built model, I’m always taking greeblies and trying them in different ways until I find what looks right for each section of the model. At the time I started, I only had the purple nacelle cover so I made the other one as if the cover were removed. Then I found the red one in my parts box. Too late. I like the detail on display with the cover removed.

20151216_071444

Cockpit halves cemented together and then I start detailing the top of the nose and behind the pilot’s seat.

20151219_092155_001

I used yellow clear pieces here, but it will all get painted blue-gray when I’m done. Actually, these will probably be black.

20151219_092138

I need to cut out some sheet styrene for the back of the air intakes. I already decided to include a car radiator to cover the back of the fuselage. Why? Because what famous Star Wars ship didn’t have a radiator?

20151219_101342

I also used some engine parts from a large scale car model for the back end. 

20151220_170632

Nice shot of the radiator.

20151220_170640_001

Time to fill the major gaps with modelling putty. This was a big, multi-night task. Lots of sanding.

20151222_152915

I won’t know if the sanding job is good until I primer. But It should suffice for a beat up fighter plane.

20151222_170319

Back cover plates on and some other details added. I really like the shocks here. 

20151224_095801

For some reason, I’m putting lots of car parts on this fighter. It seems to work so far.

20151224_095830

Little by little, more greeblies find their way onto the model. This is actually one of my favorite parts of modeling. Detailing.

20151224_095754

More details added to the top and back of the fighter. I also added some strakes above and below where the engines are mounted. A few more details and then it will be time to do the panel scoring.

20151224_133502

Triak Starfighter Build, Part 1

The Triak starfighter was derived from the Two Piper design from the start of the Great War. The design goes back to the 1980s when I was still in High School. I always imagined there were dozens of starfighter designs during the war, just like there were so many different fighter plane designs in WWII. The First Generation or Starforgers Trilogy evolution chart below shows the Two Piper design.

Starfighter Evolution Chart

Here is a line art drawing a friend did of the Triak a few years ago. I really like this kind of profile art for fighters. Anyone want to volunteer to draw all my designs like this? Contact me, I’ll give you full credit!

Terror Diver

I had some 1/32 scale jet models laying around and decided to build the Triak fighter from them in a process called kit bashing, instead of my usual scratch building. I had an F-104 Starfighter and a F-14 Tomcat, from Hasegawa and Tamia respectively.

I cobbled together two engines from PVC pipe and then used the intakes from the Tomcat and the fuselage from the Starfighter model to rough out a possible shape for the Triak starfighter. I held everything together with yellow camera tape and took some pictures. The model sat on my shelf for a while until I had the time to actually build it. Below are some shots of the taped up version of the model.

IMG_20151023_163238121_HDR

For a short time I pondered just doing a scratch build. But then opted for the kit bash route.

IMG_20151023_151058909

 

IMG_20151023_163255042

First step was to take apart the taped mock-up.

20151213_193830_001

 

20151213_193934