Phew what a jigsaw. It took 6 attempts to correctly scale the blueprints, but once done correctly then the jigsaw came together
All I have to do now is trim all the pieces, glue it all together, and reinforce it. This tank must have been just about impossible to drive it was so long and thin, and I believe they had lots of engine problems, I can see why!
You could have been stretching Limos, Alwyn, on an alternative career path ..
A question: how do to print and marry your blueprints together? Do you have a printer that can handle 'B' sizes as well as 'A' ? Mind you, A1 would probably do the job, and I imagine the job you'll do here will also be A1
"Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please"- Mark Twain.
Hi Guys thanks for the interest. Regarding the blueprints I use Microsoft PC Paint to slice the blueprint into the different views, and then using the Paint print options to increase/decrease the size of the print until it matches the size of the KV1 chassis, Paint creates a multi-page print where necessary to account for the percentage increase/decrease. I then print on A4 and sellotape the pages together.
Rob the diagonal cut was forced because the suspension stop and the suspension mount on the kv220 overlap, so diagonal was the only way to get a straight cut, normally I prefer a vertical cut as it's easier to get the sides to line up.
Another very cool and unique build, Alwyn; I'm very impressed with the diagonal cuts to lengthen the chassis.
It looks like the turret is fairly slab-sided, do you think you'll fabricate it from styrene sheet or 3D print it? Like Iain said, it does look like a cut-down KV-2 turret, I'd be interested to see how the footprints compare.