F8U3 Super Crusader
F8U3 Super Crusader
The stl is saved as 1/100 scale although the mesh is designed to be printed at 1/285 scale. I normally do this in the slicer by scaling it at 35%.
Naturally, you can scale it to any size you like.
Because I use a Creality Ender-3 with a .4mm nozzle, models meant to be scaled at 1/285 can only have details that measure ~114mm full size. As a result, I model thin parts and wing trailing edges at 120mm full size. Small details just won't show up at small sizes, yet the details I do include may look toyishly clunky if scaled up much.
I do not try to orient the model for direct printing as I think each person will have their own ideas and experience on how to print best with their own 3dprinter. I do not give advice on printer settings for the same reason except to say that with small models, temperatures must be kept as low as feasible to keep thin parts from re-melting ( such as thin nose cones and the like ).
I use the CC-BY-NC-SA 3.0 license.
Don't sell the files and feel free to make any changes or mods you like, but if you release them, you must use the same license.
For attribution; Richard Honeycutt made the original file.
The stl is saved as 1/100 scale although the mesh is designed to be printed at 1/285 scale. I normally do this in the slicer by scaling it at 35%.
Naturally, you can scale it to any size you like.
Because I use a Creality Ender-3 with a .4mm nozzle, models meant to be scaled at 1/285 can only have details that measure ~114mm full size. As a result, I model thin parts and wing trailing edges at 120mm full size. Small details just won't show up at small sizes, yet the details I do include may look toyishly clunky if scaled up much.
I do not try to orient the model for direct printing as I think each person will have their own ideas and experience on how to print best with their own 3dprinter. I do not give advice on printer settings for the same reason except to say that with small models, temperatures must be kept as low as feasible to keep thin parts from re-melting ( such as thin nose cones and the like ).
I use the CC-BY-NC-SA 3.0 license.
Don't sell the files and feel free to make any changes or mods you like, but if you release them, you must use the same license.
For attribution; Richard Honeycutt made the original file.
Filename | Size | Last updated |
---|---|---|
F8U3.zip | 683.7 KiB | 2024-02-28 |