today's work

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • redboat219
    replied
    Originally posted by rwtdiver

    What purpose does the brass tube serve anyway?

    "Firemen can stand the heat."


    Leave a comment:


  • He Who Shall Not Be Named
    replied
    Originally posted by rwtdiver
    David,

    I am sorry for jumping your build blog! But I do need your advice on my 2.4 MHZ receiver.

    Click image for larger version

Name:	NAUTILUS 4.jpg
Views:	233
Size:	47.6 KB
ID:	169210Click image for larger version

Name:	NAUTILUS 5.jpg
Views:	218
Size:	54.3 KB
ID:	169211

    Do I need to install a 3/16"X 1" brass tube on coaxial cable install? Or can I eliminate it and just follow your photo that is listed below. None of my receivers have the button clip, so I need to solder my coaxial cable to the receiver as the photo above shows. Curiosity! What purpose does the brass tube serve anyway?

    Click image for larger version

Name:	NAUTILUS 6.jpg
Views:	208
Size:	78.8 KB
ID:	169212

    Thanks for your help and advice on this David.

    Rob
    "Firemen can stand the heat."
    I know not the function of the brass tube. I've operated systems without it, and the radio link works.

    Proceed as I've instructed.

    David

    Leave a comment:


  • rwtdiver
    replied
    David,

    I am sorry for jumping your build blog! But I do need your advice on my 2.4 MHZ receiver.

    Click image for larger version

Name:	NAUTILUS 4.jpg
Views:	233
Size:	47.6 KB
ID:	169210Click image for larger version

Name:	NAUTILUS 5.jpg
Views:	218
Size:	54.3 KB
ID:	169211

    Do I need to install a 3/16"X 1" brass tube on coaxial cable install? Or can I eliminate it and just follow your photo that is listed below. None of my receivers have the button clip, so I need to solder my coaxial cable to the receiver as the photo above shows. Curiosity! What purpose does the brass tube serve anyway?

    Click image for larger version

Name:	NAUTILUS 6.jpg
Views:	208
Size:	78.8 KB
ID:	169212

    Thanks for your help and advice on this David.

    Rob
    "Firemen can stand the heat."

    Leave a comment:


  • He Who Shall Not Be Named
    replied
    Originally posted by He Who Shall Not Be Named

    LOL. FINALLY!... I beat you into submission, Steve. Took long enough.

    (For everyone looking over our shoulders: Steve Neill is very much an 'artist', in every complementary meaning of the word. Look up his **** -- decades of amazing stuff. R/c aircraft, submarines; flying rockets; public domain; commercial; and motion picture-TV work).

    OK, Steve, I'll relate the entire, lurid story tonight. Should be good for a few LOL's.

    David
    Illustrator Wanna-Be
    OK, Steve. Sorry for the delay. Here's the story:

    From age ten I knew I was going to build models professionally for the movies; just about every free moment of my life -- through school and a career in the Navy -- was spent studying and practicing the Craft.

    One vital aspect of the discipline is learning how to draw, both technical and sketch type work; stuff you can work from and stuff to tickle the creative juices of you and the client alike.

    One such exercise was to draft a very famous SF movie spacecraft, 'The Ark of Space', and make the presentation in an ersatz 'general arrangement', three-view, orthographic format. Complete title-block, technical authentication blocks and listing of associated drawing numbers. Very official looking. That project done during off-hours aboard the USS YOSEMITE on a Mediterranean half-year deployment -- something to add to my ever-expanding resume; my door-opener for the day Ellie and I would march into Burbank and demand a high-paying model-builder's job.

    Later, I added axillary views to illustrate suggested model building techniques -- all that condensed into an article for one of the many model magazines I was contributing to at the time.

    Professionals either publish, or they perish! Mom taught me that. And she was right.



    Much to my surprise, that drawing recently found its way into the pages of Bill Warren's magnum opus of SF movies, KEEP WATCHING THE SKIES. I don't know if he's aware that the drawing is merely a work of fan-art and not from the Parmount files. Well... cat's out of the bag now!



    And in time we did get some movie and TV work -- and that portfolio, featuring sketch, conceptual, orthographic, and story-board work got us the jobs. A life well planned.





    Last edited by He Who Shall Not Be Named; 02-02-2023, 10:26 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • redboat219
    replied
    Airbrush Speckle Technique

    Leave a comment:

Working...