The front is a lid from shampoo or something and always put me in mind of the Russian 'Venera' Venus Probe, so I took that and worked backwards from there.
A pair of solar panels from a speaker grille, the lid off a pill box and a handful of kit parts and voila! Rather than send it off to Venus, I felt Mars might be a suitable destination, as its currently in the news again with three separate probes headed towards it in the next few weeks.
The Mars Probe is significantly larger than my earlier space probe scratchbuilds, the Ranger 5 Moon Probe and the circumlunar Sputnik 7, which I knocked out a few months back. I think I might have to make the Mars Lander now, to go with it! Watch this space!
A pair of solar panels from a speaker grille, the lid off a pill box and a handful of kit parts and voila! Rather than send it off to Venus, I felt Mars might be a suitable destination, as its currently in the news again with three separate probes headed towards it in the next few weeks.
The Mars Probe is significantly larger than my earlier space probe scratchbuilds, the Ranger 5 Moon Probe and the circumlunar Sputnik 7, which I knocked out a few months back. I think I might have to make the Mars Lander now, to go with it! Watch this space!
These are superb creations!
ReplyDeletecheers Kev, thats praise indeed!
DeleteVery nice Wotan. Love the dynamic coloured lighting.
ReplyDeleteHow big are they ?
Mish.
hi Mish - the Mars Probe is about 4", Sputnik and Ranger are just under 3 nches, including antennae
DeleteCool. What sort of glue did you use for then polythene parts (shampoo bottle lid and such)?
ReplyDeleteHi Yorkie - its all superglue, which is a bit hit and miss. Works great on flesh, but I have had to reglue bits of the model together again. The shampoo lid is helped by a firm push connection with the tube its attached to. For polythene and stuff, i would use epoxy adhesive, the two tube stuff, but superglues fine to hold it together for a few photos. Theyre not intended to last.
DeleteThey are great- somebody said that NASA's designers had been influenced by American science fiction television and films -which of course the Russians had not seen.
ReplyDelete