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Post Info TOPIC: Medium D plans progress


Legend

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Medium D plans progress
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Hopefully I shall manage to attach the first photo (scanning awkward at present) of my plans for the Medium D tank; the plans are incomplete and will take some time to finish, but you may wish to see how they are coming on and share any comments you have.

This first pic is of my first attempt, 1:72 scale and based on the mockup; it was abandoned for 1:36 scale.



-- Edited by TinCanTadpole on Tuesday 15th of January 2013 05:17:23 PM



-- Edited by TinCanTadpole on Tuesday 15th of January 2013 05:22:22 PM

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Legend

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Left side elevation at 1:36 scale, worked from photos of Mk D rather than mockup: idler and sprocket wheels are smaller, turret further forward (even on original D), external drive chain casings added, etc.



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Legend

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Front and rear elevations at 1:36. Much work still to do here.



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Corporal

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Ah, taking the old-school route and drafting by hand, good show. I can't offer much practical advice, just some encouragement. Keep up the good work and let us know how we can assist.

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Hero

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Looking good! Pencil and paper still can't be beat for all the early work.

H x



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Lieutenant

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Excellent start TCT! Looking forard to updates

RS

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R Simmie


Legend

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Fair do, whatever you're comfortable with. I like using vector graphics packages for drawing technical things, such as vehicles, machines, ships etc., because the precision achievable is amazing, and repetetive elements (e.g. track links) are easy to deal with. On the other hand, for organic subjects pencil/pen and paper are hard to beat.



-- Edited by Roger Todd on Thursday 17th of January 2013 01:14:11 AM

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Legend

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Thank you all for your kind comments.

At present I am not sure what form the final plans will take: I do not have a vector-based drawing program, so my options are to scan and tidy up in Photoshop Elements, or to trace a good copy in ink (may sound basic, but good results can be obtained with care) and scan in. Obviously this will not be quite as exacting dimensionally as drawing with a CAD program, but I hope it will prove adequate for 1/72 models; if Wayne is still interested in adding the Medium D to his list of card models once the plans are complete, I expect he'll be able to correct any slight mismatch when he produces a CAD model.

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Legend

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Looking good! Shame you don't have a vector graphics package, as then you can amend things very easily. Even a reasonably simple one like an early Corel Draw would do (I made all my Flying Elephant and Macfie drawings in Corel Draw 9, which is ancient).

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Legend

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On the other hand, at least it is easier on the eyes staring at a paper page rather than a screen smile



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Corporal

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I certainly didn't mean to kick-off the whole "paper vs. computer" debate for drafting.

Though they may have a steep learning curve (and wear out your eyes from staring at the monitor!), there are plenty of free and open-source 3D modeling programs available (FreeCAD, Google Sketchup) that allow you to export to 2D drawings, there are also some free dedicated 2D programs offered by big companies like Siemens (http://www.plm.automation.siemens.com/en_us/products/velocity/solidedge/free2d/) and Dessault Systemes, who makes Solidworks (http://www.3ds.com/products/draftsight/free-cad-software/).

For purely vector-based drawing, it looks like there's a lot of free options available (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_vector_graphics_editors)

Of course, maybe we should ask the resident CAD expert what she is using (TurboCad?)

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Legend

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Interesting suggestions there, ta very much!

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Legend

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Fear not, Mr Timbers, I for one take no offence over the matter; CAD is undoubtedly best for accuracy, and the programs you have listed will be worth thinking about - so thanks for posting.

Roger is absolutely right about repetitive elements like track links, and I would also add that trying to draw tracks with a 5.3mm pitch by hand is far from precise.

I intend to alter the turret and other details, plus I need to figure out other details and proportions; I think the rear-side faces of the turret should be straight, and the height will have to be adjusted to get the proportions right - the central ridge of the roof should slope more steeply than the top edge of the front-side face (above the side MG mounts), but trying to get this to work without upsetting other measurements is a puzzle.



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Colonel

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I'll put the Medium D on my to-do list.  When I see enough drawings posted, i might start a 3D model.  I will  need your overall length, width and height also.

Why 1:36 scale rather than 1:35 or 1:32?



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Legend

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1:36 was suggested by R Simmie for easy reduction to 1:72, which is what most modellers work in; it also enlarges easily to 1:18, which would suit me for a radio-controlled model at some point in the dim and distant future.
1:35 would obviously be a good choice, but 1:32 is one of those scales that never quite caught on.

Overall length is 30 feet for the full-size vehicle, precisely 127mm at 1:72. Height looks fairly reliable at 9ft 2.5in, scale size 38.98mm; width however, is a more shaky matter. MM magazine states 7ft 5in, as does the Tanks website at Florida State Uni, but I think James H quoted 7ft 3in from a D Fletcher book in a previous thread. My own rough calculations from photos (which can only yield rough figures, given the distortions of perspective) suggest 7ft 3in is the more likely figure, however not as an overall figure, but as a value for most of the length: that is, the width across the tracks,not the width at the rear where the drive chain casings protrude beyond the tracks.

For this reason I'm having to use a bit of guesswork and trying to get the proportions right. 

One thing to bear in mind with the height is that the driver's cupola may be a pop-up design. My drawings so far suggest that the cupola will only fit inside a 9ft 2.5in height if what appears to be a vision gap all the way round is equivalent to a rhomboid-cab vision flap in the open position - so that the closed-down position lowers the whole cupola like a hat, reducing the overall height.



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Legend

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No drawings to show at present, for a very good reason - I am reviewing the measurements I worked out, as they are not right. I won't start a new set of drawings until the dimensions seem right, but it might mean a shallower front/rear rake to the tracks, as the rear height is going to drop about 4-5 inches (10-13cm) at full-size.

Also, starting to think that my end target of drawing plans for all four variants (D, D*, D**, D Modified) should be extended to include the mockup - perhaps as a production tank might have looked if built to that design.

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Legend

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I have started a new set of drawings, again at 1:36 scale, with a slightly lower sprocket position and slight adjustments to other measurements. The drawings will not be finished for a while, but to test the accuracy I have made a simplified paper model at 1:72 scale.

For the most part I am satisfied with the result: the turret needs some more tweaks (although it is improved over my earlier drawing), but I think the track frames look right, so I can concentrate on other areas.

I hope to post some pics of the paper model tomorrow.

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Corporal

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I'm eager to see this.  Keep us updated.



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Legend

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Here's the first pic - unfortunately I seem to have trouble uploading more than one file per post, so there will have to be a long string of posts.



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Legend

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Second pic



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Legend

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Apparently you have to write something as well as post pics



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Legend

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Four



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Legend

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Five



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Legend

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Having problems again with attaching the pics - I'll try again later, there are fifteen more to do.

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Legend

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Trying again.



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Legend

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Another



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Legend

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Rear upper view: the model is as I said before, simplified, the intention being to see if the profile of the track frames and shape of the turret look right. The back of the hull (and the floor of the hull) is thus basic, not accurate - the mud-shutes are drawn-on too, for ease.



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Legend

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Another.



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Legend

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Right side view - showing the fore-aft rake, which I currently have at roughly 3.8 degrees, the correct angle to meet the original design requirement to cross a four-foot-high obstacle at one end and a six-footer at the other.



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Legend

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Front view



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Legend

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Plan view



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Legend

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A better view of the rear quarter



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Legend

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Nearly finished - some of these pics are very similar to each other, but I was trying to show the effect of perspective on the slope of the tracks.



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Legend

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Left side



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Legend

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Last one, I think - the order is higgledy-piggledy, because of the problems uploading earlier. I'm not quite sure if these are the best angles, but they should show the shape of the model well enough.

The turret needs some work, to adjust the contour of the roof and deepen the sides where they sponson-out over the tracks; this is supposed to be the Fowler turret, with the curved roof and deepening sides, but it looks more like a blend of the Fowler and the Wolseley. I may try drawing both turrets and make them up at 1:36, to make the shape clearer than it is at 1:72. The Wolseley turret has a chine down the middle of the roof and the forward face of the turret 'wing' (or sponson) does not increase in depth like the Fowler turret does; all the increase in height happens behind the 'wing'.



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Lieutenant

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"CRIKEY" as Saint Steve would say! Very impressive TCT, how does it compare with similar angled photographs of the real thing?

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R Simmie


Legend

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It compares pretty well; I had wondered if the two-stage lift of the track (at the back) would look right, but it matches very well. Working out the heights for idler and sprocket was no easy feat - and I may well be several cm off (I chose a lower value from the likely range, to provide enough height for turret and cupola), but the overall effect looks fine.

The turret is obviously a difficult shape to get right; I think it needs to be a little taller in places, with the points of the 'wings'/sponsons moved forward a bit. It won't be easy, but the result so far is definitely an improvement over the partial plans I posted three weeks back.

Next task is to adjust the turret, then try a larger-scale model (just the turret) to check the shape. This is necessary, because mapping out the shape of curved/angled panels (as flat panels) is tricky, and I have to figure out a better way of doing so for the roof.

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Hero

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That's already looking very good indeed. For the short time you have been working on these plans you should be really happy with how it is looking. It already compares well with photos.

The turret reminds me of a skirt for a RC hovercraft I made once... one of those simple jobs I said ' I can do that!' and soon regretted. No 3D Cad back then, so to work out all the curves for the skirt corners, it was out with the squared paper. In that instance I drew a centre/equator line and measured above and belowas there was nothing but curves. This is the sorta process I went through... Hovercraft.

Keep showing us the tweaks and changes, for me that learning process is where the interest lays.

Helen x



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Legend

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Looking very good!

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Legend

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Thank you all for your kind comments - it's very encouraging!

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