I have been slowly building a collection of 1930's air forces to wargame with. Out of old habit I selected 1/72 scale for my collection (this was back in the days before 3d printing and the internet). In this process I came to realize that there were a LOT of designs that were not available in 1/72 scale and a good many there were available were very expensive limited-edition kits. Not having the money to buy, or the time to build, dozens of high-fidelity scale models I figured that I should give the 3d printing world a try.
To my surprise and delight I founds that there were dozens of generous souls out there who were creating and giving away STL files of aircraft (and tanks and ships, etc etc). Taking advantage of this kindness I promptly downloaded some files and scaled them to 1/72 and fed them to my handy Bambu Mini. After a couple of hilarious misprints (always add the supports!) I managed to print a couple of good looking models. These cost me about 60 cents worth of filament and a few hours print time. Cleaning up the prints takes less time than building a scale model so its a win regarding my time.
Holy crap the A-12 came out nice. It didn't take long for you to become a 3D convert.
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Kevin
Considering that I need six A-12s for the scenario I am thinking of running and the price of a plastic model of one runs right around $55.00US it took about a nanosecond for that decision
DeleteLooks great! I completely agree about 3D printing. Projects I could never have considered before printers are now a no-brainer! I can add to my old 25mm ranges and terrain is even more open to an almost limitless choice of items!
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