| | | | | Brian,
Brian Davis wrote:
> And the video on YouTube, with my son standing in for Steve's legs:
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hnpMrgDCXlc
Absolutely awesome!
/Matthias (deeply impressed)
ps Now I'm going to wait day and night for the LDraw file ;-) (give them
an inch and they will take a mile...)
| | | | | | | | | | | | | In lugnet.org.us.laflrc, Matthias Paul Scholz wrote:
> Brian,
>
> Brian Davis wrote:
>
> > And the video on YouTube, with my son standing in for Steve's legs:
> >
> > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hnpMrgDCXlc
>
>
> Absolutely awesome!
>
> /Matthias (deeply impressed)
>
> ps Now I'm going to wait day and night for the LDraw file ;-) (give them
> an inch and they will take a mile...)
Same comments and feelings here ;o)
Brian, it would help to reproduce your outstanding design (and maybe CAD it!) if
you could provide higher resolutions photographs somewhere...
Philo
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
| In lugnet.org.us.laflrc, Philippe Hurbain wrote:
> Brian, it would help to reproduce your outstanding
> design (and maybe CAD it!) if you could provide higher
> resolutions photographs somewhere...
Thank you both Matthias & Philo (and others!). give them an inch indeed...
first, I really feel i need to apologize for *not* CADing this up. I've tried to
CAD stuff, but the combination of my chosen platform (Mac) coupled with where I
like using my free time (building, not CADing) and furthermore the complexity of
the designs I'm actually interested in documenting (like this), have conspired
to make me a lazy slob who's not documented things in the "normal" format.
Somebody, please help me, or brow-beat me some more, and I'll try to rise to
that standard sometime.
As to higher-res photos, agreed: these were actually reduced for BS, and I've
got higher-res ones availible. I probably need to do an even *better* job
documented the construction, not just the parts but the sequence: for studless
constructions like this, I sometimes feel like I'm making one of those "slide
the pieces to assemble the cube" wooden puzzle. For instance, one of those
images I had to use my fingers to point out three red (in that "step") pins that
need to be pulled to remove a long white composite beam that is critical to
holding the two shoulders on... but is actually partially hidden within the
shoulders on the ends.
Where do you guys want more/better photos? What needs improved documentation?
--
Brian Davis
| | | | | | |