Stahlhart papercraft
 
Go back to this site's homepage
Models
needing help with our models?
find out about stahlhart
Send us a message
 
 
Aircraft, Helicopters and Spaceships Castles, Churches, Temples and the like Human figures, Animals, Robots

back to F5D Skylancer main

Building the
F5D Skylancer

The model stands in front of the printer in a yellowish light.
The Skylancer's Beta Version

The Skylancer was my first new papercraft after a pause of around ten years (see history) It ows its origin to the Fiddlers Green F4D Skyray, of which I had done three repaints. I thought, I could change the Skyray to a Skylancer with only a few modifications. After doing some research on the Skylancer, however, the parts of the Skyray became lesser and lesser, until actually only the middle fuselage piece was the same. This somehow mirrors the development history of the real Skylancer, which started of as a derivation end ended up a complete new design. I also experimented on the Skylancer with trying to calculate the rounded fuselage from squared sections, but it didn't work at all. I build the fuselage in one night, and added the wings the next day, as with all prototypes from then on the landing gear was merely a doubled sheet and the wings had no structure. After enjoying the prototype for a while I cut it apart again, scanned it and built the actual shapes in Freehand, adding the structures on the wings and detailed landing gear. It took three beta versions to get it to fit good enough and several more testbuilds of the nose only to get the painting schemes right.

Basic fuselage on the threeside view   This is the basic fuselage fitted to the right size by the three-side view in 1:60 scale
 
the wings are ready to be attached   The fuselage now has the backbone, Cockpit and Tailfin. The Wings have been prepared. In the background there is a wing of the Skyray, which I used to check how to built it.
 
The prototype model   The finished prototype. Note that the wings are left white, because its better to do their structure in Freehand.
 
return to top