Brick-Wombat Posted September 3, 2019 Posted September 3, 2019 (edited) The Dreadnaught Class Heavy Cruiser is a Star Wars warship well known from the lost Katana Fleet of the Thrawn Trilogy. At 600 meters, it was roughly half the length of a Venator and could be configured with varying combinations of turbolasers, point defense cannons, and missiles. Most of these would be located in the hull "blisters" similar to Mon Calamari ships. I was recently acquainted with the cruiser as I'm reading through the Thrawn Trilogy (Half way through the second book at the moment). Not the most sophisticated-looking ship, but a fun one to design nonetheless. As usual, it's designed to 1:2600 scale. Some additional views in the spoiler below... Spoiler Edited September 3, 2019 by K_W Quote
Brick-Wombat Posted September 27, 2019 Author Posted September 27, 2019 Finally got around to making this. All in all, I'm happy with the aesthetic. It's also much more robust than I expected. The 16x hinge bricks used for the side panels and weapon blisters have enough friction such that you can easily hold the ship by the center fuselage. Quote
DrMuttonchops Posted September 27, 2019 Posted September 27, 2019 (edited) Holy cow dude, that is amazing. The only thing it's missing is the windows for the bridge! Stellar job on shaping, it looks perfect. The engines and weapon emplacement blisters are spot-on as well. Great Greebling as well, how many parts did you use? Is your Venator also at the same scale? I saw on your Flickr that you're not a fan of stickers, but there are printed Open Circle Fleet emblems as well! Part 4150px33, took me a while to find it. Edited September 27, 2019 by DrMuttonchops Added OCF part Quote
Darnok Posted September 27, 2019 Posted September 27, 2019 Being brutally honest here: at first I was far from impressed. "Just some microscale cruiser, duh" ... man, first impressions can fool ya! Seeing the model next to other microbuilds really puts it into perspective. Great work overall! Quote
Brick-Wombat Posted September 27, 2019 Author Posted September 27, 2019 (edited) @DrMuttonchops Thanks. The piece count is around 300. The stud.io model and the brick version have some small variations internally for the sake of added rigidity, so I'm not 100% sure of the final number. As for the blisters, I saw a handful of Dreadnaught versions that either used 2x2 round tiles or 2x2 dishes. I didn't like the flatness of the tile method and I didn't like the random stud on the dish version. Luckily, combining part 15535 and 2654 (below) saved the day! The Venator is Kristof's design, and it was the inspiration for all my mini/midi ships. They're all at ~1:2600 scale. @Darnok Honestly, I don't blame you. Frankly, the Dreadnaught is a pretty uninspiring design. It doesn't have the elegance of the Venator or Arquitens, nor the uniqueness of something like the Nebulon B. It's also not a very well known ship. But I guess beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Upon reading about it in the Thrawn Trilogy, something about it got me hooked and I was compelled to create my own version. Regardless, it's not going to win any beauty pageants! Edited September 27, 2019 by Brick-Wombat Quote
Veynom Posted October 2, 2019 Posted October 2, 2019 Very nice little built rendering justice to a not-so-well-known Star Wars ship. Nice fleet that you are building there. Quote
Kristof Posted October 3, 2019 Posted October 3, 2019 Big fan of your work here! Super cool design with this one. And as a 'once-in-a-blue-moon-completes-a-moc' type of guy I am continuously impressed with your steady pace in expanding the fleet. Quote
Brick-Wombat Posted October 3, 2019 Author Posted October 3, 2019 1 hour ago, Kristof said: Big fan of your work here! Super cool design with this one. And as a 'once-in-a-blue-moon-completes-a-moc' type of guy I am continuously impressed with your steady pace in expanding the fleet. Your designs are like a fine wine. Takes time, but well worth the wait. I still remember when you first posted your Venator as an IDEAS submission. Yes, it's been a long time since then, but I'd rather a quality design than something that was rushed... which, admittedly, mine tend to be the latter. Quote
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