Easy[TK] Posted April 15, 2019 Author Report Posted April 15, 2019 (edited) Going to cover a bunch of stuff in this section. More trimming, strapping for the arms and legs. To start with I trimmed the return edges off the cod piece. It was quite large and very uncomfortable. I also cut the trailing piece down to the right size. The pic isn’t a great angle but you can see it’s neatened up. Better angles. This won’t dig in like it was when I walk. The The butt plate is trimmed nicely too. Seen from above looking down through the shoulder straps…I made and installed the strap that joins them. Two snaps in the back and in the front I used a split rivet and washer like movie worn kits. To do this I folded the elastic strap over once and ran my soldering iron through to make a hole for the rivet. Because I have the clamshell closed and latched I measured the length I need to the back, cut it and put holes in for the snaps. I used those to mark the hole st drill. Then I installed the snaps and put it in. To hang the thighs I’m using a belt made from a weed whacker shoulder strap. I have several so I’m doing suspenders for to attach to the ab and kidney plates as well. For the thighs I cut pieces to the width of the inner cover strip, one for each piece. I drilled holes for rivets. I’m using two on each for better holding power. I then burned holes in some 2” black elastic strapping, lined up to the drilled holes. I measured and marked both thighs like this. This is where the bottom of the rivet plate will go. I picked a lower mark to make a longer strap. This will allow a little more flexibility for bending and sitting. E6000 and a few magnets again. The elastic straps are looped around the belt. You can make out a couple of rivets in the belt. This is an extra piece of strapping riveted on the inside that limit the travel of the loop so they won’t constantly try to move inward to the center. They are about 5” long so the loop can travel outward if needed. This is the suspenders left front buckle. The buckle strap is attached to the ab plate and the hanging straps cross over in the back then join to the kidney plate. The crossover is riveted. A little better lighting. It’s hard to see the crossover but it’s there. I’ll have to take some pics of it opened up and post them here. Mark strapping time. I’m using 1” black elastic and snaps with plates. Plates have the male snaps, straps have the female with button tops. This is what I hammer them together with. Shouldlook like this when done. This is the top of the shoulder bell. Pic is upside down. I like lots of E6000 because this will be taking lots of stress while moving. I marked the lower bell snap locations with the length of my middle finger then applied lots of glue. Be sure to push it in and wiggle it to set it right in. Some glue cows up through the snap so I smear it around the inside to simulate a glue rivet. I makes the left and right pieces in Aurebesh. I just thought it would be cool. GEEK!! Right and left bells marked. They differ slightly on the bottom. I set them so the fronts are equal and the short back on one is on my trigger arm (right). For the shoulder to biceps I cut 5” straps and measured how far the snaps are when they are where I want them while wearing. To do that I held them in place and my wife marked the bicep piece at the bottom of the bell. I found the snaps centers at 3-1/4” apart so 7/8” in from the ends worked well. When marked at 7/8” on both ends, 3-1/4” spacing is exactly as planned. Now, remember that hole I made in the table for the snap to make the ammo belt button covers? I also use it to burn snap and rivet holes in elastic straps and webbing with the soldering iron. It makes installing them snap… You can use may things as a support for hammering snaps and rivets. I sometimes use this scrap of 4x4 wood block. Ready to make the second one. With the bell strap glued in. The shoulder and bicep are ready. The shoulder attachment is 3” ( or just under) and the snap spacing is 2”. This works for me to keep the gap nice and tight. Follow the steps above and make two. I used 2” elastic lined up with the forward edges of the cover strips as shown in the locations reference. My dog Trooper (bottom of pic) is getting big, 9 months old now. Benson is not very flexible so it’s a chore to position the armour on him, but with some work I made it stay as it will hang on me. I fill it out a bit better so the alignment here is generally ok but much better on me because it doesn’t flop around. A shot from the rear. The bicep is sort of jammed to stay in position under the bell and the forearm hangs freely. It stays lined up properly. Considering it’s a mannequin, and much thinner than me, the pieces look good together. I didn’t trim the snap area enough so I redid it. After trimming and drilling it to fit the rivets I check the fit of the rivets. I drill the hole so the rivet fits snugly. A bigger hole would let it sit flat but I don’t want any movement. I use an oversized bit to taper the hole… and then a Dremel bit to finish it. Both are done by hand, not with tools. Then the snap base sits nice and flat and still snugly. This is the split rivet in the front. This is how they were fastened in the movies. It’s little details that will help reach L3 Centurion. I may not get it but it won’t be for lack of effort. I’ll contin to make the touch ups needed to reach it. This will be much more comfortable than the way it was. Note: i screwed up my sizing on my neckseal and am getting a new one. Teresa at Geeky Pink’s Phantastic Gaskets is replacing it at no charge even though it’s my mistake. (Didn’t account for my long hair going through it). Her stuff is the best and her customer care is like family care. You don’t get better anywhere. If you take nothing else from my build thread, take the suppliers and support I’ve mentioned throughout it, and the advice such as is seen throughout my build. Edited April 16, 2019 by Easy Quote
ukswrath[Staff] Posted April 15, 2019 Report Posted April 15, 2019 Hey Dave looking good. Just a heads up, the area on your posterior you're using to connect to the Cod is incorrect, it should end where I've illustrated. This is by no means a deal breaker and it's is a very common mistake made with this armor. Keep up the good work Quote
Easy[TK] Posted April 16, 2019 Author Report Posted April 16, 2019 On 4/15/2019 at 8:50 AM, ukswrath said: Hey Dave looking good. Just a heads up, the area on your posterior you're using to connect to the Cod is incorrect, it should end where I've illustrated. This is by no means a deal breaker and it's is a very common mistake made with this armor. Keep up the good work Thanks Tony. I fixed it last night. Did the button and screws paint as well. Except for the neckseal I think it’s ready. All my adjustments and things I’ve changed because of the good support in here are posted in the thread sections that cover those specific build processes. Still considering trimming behind the knees. Going up stairs is tough, down is easy. This is a long build thread. Hopefully it is good and will help future builders. I’m going to spend Friday working on fitting it just right and taking some pics. I’ll use an older neck seal but it’s tight. If everything looks good I’m posting pics here and in the FB groups for feedback. 1 Quote
phil Posted April 16, 2019 Report Posted April 16, 2019 hi, have you removed the return edges on top of your thighs. ?? Quote
Easy[TK] Posted April 16, 2019 Author Report Posted April 16, 2019 2 hours ago, phil said: hi, have you removed the return edges on top of your thighs. ?? Yes I did. They were too tall for me. At some point I’m going to heat and roll them in. 1 Quote
gmrhodes13[Staff] Posted April 16, 2019 Report Posted April 16, 2019 Looking good, keep up the great work 1 Quote
Easy[TK] Posted April 17, 2019 Author Report Posted April 17, 2019 A few little touchups. I removed the Chicago screws and replaced them with split rivets. A few dabs of white paint and these are perfect. I also touched up the bracket screws to be screen accurate. Nice and neat. Did all of them to make me happy Quote
gmrhodes13[Staff] Posted April 17, 2019 Report Posted April 17, 2019 Nice work, with the thigh ammo strip the rivets should be more towards the corners, shouldn't be an issue for basic approval thought, depending on your GML Quote
Easy[TK] Posted April 18, 2019 Author Report Posted April 18, 2019 3 hours ago, gmrhodes13 said: Nice work, with the thigh ammo strip the rivets should be more towards the corners, shouldn't be an issue for basic approval thought, depending on your GML THAT’s what is bugging me about the knee. Just couldn’t put my finger on it. Thanks. i need to trim this off the inside… and this off the outside. That’s what I’m looking for. Much cleaner look now. Thank you gmrhodes13. Sometimes a detached eye sees clearer. 2 Quote
Easy[TK] Posted April 19, 2019 Author Report Posted April 19, 2019 This is my first time in the full kit. It’s as comfortable as I expected. You'd think he’d have centered the TD. 1 Quote
Easy[TK] Posted April 27, 2019 Author Report Posted April 27, 2019 So I made some adjustments and took some new pics. Hoping I’m ready to submit. 1 Quote
CableGuy[TK] Posted April 27, 2019 Report Posted April 27, 2019 Looking good, Trooper. Looks like basic will be quite straight forward for you. :-) Quote
gmrhodes13[Staff] Posted April 27, 2019 Report Posted April 27, 2019 Nice work on the adjustments, good luck with approval Quote
Easy[TK] Posted April 29, 2019 Author Report Posted April 29, 2019 TK 46165 reporting for duty. Theres so many to thank for helping me get here. I’ll try to get to each of you. 7 Quote
Cricket[TK] Posted April 29, 2019 Report Posted April 29, 2019 Welcome aboard, TK-46165! Be sure to report over to the 501st Access page and obtain your new Access Level! Quote
mjrose927[TK] Posted May 2, 2019 Report Posted May 2, 2019 Did the S gasket come with your helmet? Or did you buy it some place???Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Quote
Easy[TK] Posted May 2, 2019 Author Report Posted May 2, 2019 34 minutes ago, mjrose927 said: Did the S gasket come with your helmet? Or did you buy it some place??? Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk It came with mine. Quote
DZFireMedic[TK] Posted May 23, 2019 Report Posted May 23, 2019 Starting work on the limbs. First is a forearm. There are two distinctly different forearms. Not sure which is left or right. The difference is one is slightly longer with a deeper cut into the inner forearm piece. I’m told they are interchangeable so, based on movie stills, I’ve decided to use this piece on the trigger arm. It will be my right arm piece. The reason is that this arm will generally be bent farther when holding the blaster so ideally for comfort. So this will be the left forearm. I matched the left and right inners with their outers, trimmed off the lower return edges and did a fitting on my bare arm. I marked the inner forearm for trimming. Only the inner pieces will get trimmed because the outer pieces came trimmed properly. I marked the cut lines with a pencil and made the first cut…oh me nerves…which is the edge that will be on top and the straightest cut. The second cut cut is on an angle that will give the forearm the taper it needs to fit the arm nicely. After the first cut I taped the cut edge to the outer arm and fit it again. You can see the old line has been replaced with one that works better. I use the aluminum ruler to score straight lines. A few passes with the blade then I snap it nice and cleanly. I usually do some light passes in the groove just to make it a nicely trimmed edge. I use tape and magnets to set it up and try it on. You can see the trimmed edges and the taper. I line up the return edge end, at the elbow, and will trim the wrist end for a nice smooth line around. I’ll be using inner and outer strips to complete it. The cuts are really straight and mate nicely with the outer arm. No sanding has been done to the cut edges. Notice the stack of magnets on the left…it picked up a screw bit as I moved it across the table. The bit was still there from the bucket build. Put your stuff away when you’re done with it folks. It’s neater, you won’t likely lose stuff or damage stuff. Left forearm trimming and fitting. First the wrist end return edge goes. Again a quick fit and marking for the sizing cuts. Here we can see the difference in the two forearms. Right forearm has a slight taper at the top. Left has a fairly straight, 90 edge at the top. From Victor Matts, maker of this armour, of AM Armor: The right forearm tapers at the top as this allows the right arm to be bend more easily when carrying a blaster, while the left arm extends more straight, holding the barrel of the blaster farther away from the body. The strips run up the top and bottom of the arm so this cut should run this line. With the cuts made an the halves taped I did a test fit. Everything lines up nice and it’s ready for the inner and outer cover strips. Some troopers only use outer strips but I like the strength the inner strips add. The first inner strip ready to be glued in. I applied E6000 to the strip and secured it with clamps at the ends and these very strong magnets in the middle. Inside view. I doubled the magnets inside for better pullin power. The strip will seat perfectly flat to both halves. I’ll be doing inside strips only to start with to form the pieces. The outer strips will go on once I’m satisfied with the final fit. Where did you get the strips? Thanks!Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk 1 Quote
Easy[TK] Posted May 23, 2019 Author Report Posted May 23, 2019 6 hours ago, DZFireMedic said: Where did you get the strips? Thanks! Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk They came with my AM Armor kit. Quote
DZFireMedic[TK] Posted May 29, 2019 Report Posted May 29, 2019 They came with my AM Armor kit. I found them thanks!Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Quote
Easy[TK] Posted June 26, 2019 Author Report Posted June 26, 2019 After some tweaking and tidying up I achieved EIB. Here’s some of the things I did to get there. I cleaned up the frown paint paint to keep it only on the teeth. Replaced the damaged and short brow with a new one from Trooperbay. I built a 3D printed E-11 blaster. Quote
Easy[TK] Posted June 26, 2019 Author Report Posted June 26, 2019 (edited) Now I’m making some changes to work toward centurion. To reach that I’m told I need to close the gap in the shoulder bells and get the shins lower. To do that I’m trimming the shoulder bells shorten the top and follow the contours of the chest and back plates. Next day: Trimmed out the tops and contoured them a little. This is with the straps reattached ANH hung in place. Once I test fit it to me I’ll know if any more trimming is needed. I put a piece of Velcro on the boots and inside the shins to keep them down and centered. I also trimmed out the top rear area like the screen used stunt kits. Next day: Both done now. I also trimmed a higher arc I’ve the heels. They don’t get pushed up when walking now. Pushing up sometimes made the backs open up as the narrow bottom area was pushed over the wider calf area. That takes care care of the gaps that were there (below picture). I’ll be trimming the thighs the same way. This will increase mobility and lessen the stress on the kit when moving I neatened up the vocoder paint as well. Before Edited June 26, 2019 by Easy 2 Quote
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