Click and drag to rotate
Falcon: SE Engine, Fine Grille, 1:144 3d printed

DIGITAL PREVIEW
Not a Photo

Smoothest Fine Detail Plastic
Falcon: SE Engine, Fine Grille, 1:144 3d printed
Falcon: SE Engine, Fine Grille, 1:144 3d printed

DIGITAL PREVIEW
Not a Photo

Falcon: SE Engine, Fine Grille, 1:144 3d printed
Falcon: SE Engine, Fine Grille, 1:144 3d printed

DIGITAL PREVIEW
Not a Photo

Falcon: SE Engine, Fine Grille, 1:144

Print With Shapeways
Choose Your Material
$17.82
Choose your color and finish
QTY

Have a question about this product?

contact the designer
You must be logged in and verified to contact the designer.
Product Description
Falcon SE/Fine Molds Engine, Fine Grille, for the Bandai 1:144 kit

This is a replica of the engine grille from the SE film. It has a finely spaced grid (75 openings), with a replica of the engine block design created for the Fine Molds Falcon model (see below).

You'll probably want to put a thin layer of translucent tracing paper or something behind the engine, so any internal light source isn't visible. Some filing and building up gaps with styrene will probably be required to fit this part into the Bandai Falcon.



Falcon engine designs

There have been several different Falcon engine designs over the years. Your choices basically boil down to:

1) A blank white plastic wall. The OT models had simple white 
acrylic sheets over the back, producing a wall of light when lit. You never got to see the engine area powered off, so we have no idea what the engines were supposed to look like.

2) A finely-spaced backlit grid with no internal engine details. For the SE film, John Knoll and his team designed a finely spaced rectilinear grid for the back end. It featured a simple glow of light, going from red to blue to white as the ship took off. It was never shown powered off, so the internals are not known.

3) A finely spaced grid with internal eggcrate engine ports. When Japan's Fine Molds released a 1/72 Falcon kit in the mid 2000s, they supposedly asked ILM what the engines looked like when off. ILM's answer was to design a boxlike structure to sit behind the SE's narrow grid. This had a double row of rounded-rectangular holes, like an eggcrate, through which magic Falcon energy could shine.

4) A widely-spaced backlit grid with curved engine ports. The TFA Falcon introduced two new engine continuity problems. The CGI version of the ship has an engine grid - but with much wider spacing than the SE Falcon's! Behind this new grid was a complex curved box and rod structure, sort of like a blocky venturi nozzle for an imaginary energy jet system.

5) TFA curved engine ports; no grid. The physical TFA Falcon set (as seen on Greenham Common) appears to have the CGI model's internal engine structure but without the external grid, which makes no sense and is a strange continuity problem. The physical replica model on display at the Launch Bay exhibition looks like this as well.



Please read the following if you're interested in these items.

These accurizing parts are not mass-market commercial products. I made them for my own use, and have put them here in case they're of interest to someone else. Possibly you, since you’re reading this.

These are components for the serious model maker who wants to build a more accurate miniature. They require a lot of fiddling and careful installation. If you don't want to trim, file, sand, and glue, then these aren't the parts you're looking for!

The parts are tiny, and easily broken. They push the limits of today's 3D printers. The detail in the digital previews is all there, but it won't always be visible at the miniscule sizes that this scale requires!
Details
What's in the box:
144 Fm Engine Fine
Dimensions:
11.2 x 2.85 x 1.99 cm
Switch to inches
4.41 x 1.12 x 0.78 inches
Switch to cm
Success Rate:
First To try.
What's this?
Rating:
Mature audiences only.