Sandtrooper, 1:12, Julius Perdana design

snake7

Senior Member
Dec 13, 2004
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Hello everyone,

I’m taking a short break from the armor section again ;)

As usual, this is my “rest” model — and this time also a test build in terms of paper and print. It’s the first time in quite a while that I’ve printed model templates at home.

I printed everything on a Canon printer using Canon Photo Paper Matte (170 gsm).
After printing, I coated all the pages with Americana varnish to protect the surface.

For this project, I chose a relatively simple free model of a Sandtrooper from the Star Wars universe — my second favorite subject after WWII armor :)

Julius Perdana from Paper Replika has designed some excellent models in this theme.
I’ve already built his Scout Trooper on a 74-Z Speeder Bike in 1:12 scale.

This model was originally in 1:6 scale, so I downscaled it to 1:12 to match my collection.

This particular Sandtrooper (also known as a Desert Stormtrooper) is a squad leader, identified by the orange shoulder pauldron. He is equipped with an SD-48 survival backpack and a T-21 light repeating blaster.

By downscaling, I slightly increased the difficulty, but so far everything has been manageable in terms of part size and paper thickness.

If you’re interested, you can read more about this trooper here: here

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Originally, the model consists of 12 template pages. I managed to fit two pages onto a single A4 sheet, so in total I ended up with 6 pages.

The instructions are very simple and are provided only as images on the Paper Replika website.

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I started with the shoes and the base.
The base was laminated on 1.5 mm cardboard for added strength.

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It appears that you are off to a great start. It is interesting that you have downscaled it to 1:16 scale. I am looking forward to see how it turns out.
 
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Cool stuff! It's always fascinating to see how Julius managed to translate organic shapes into paper in such an elegant way. The Biker Scout is bigger than it is supposed to be, so I'm very curious to see if the scale is right on this one. :)
 
Cool stuff! It's always fascinating to see how Julius managed to translate organic shapes into paper in such an elegant way. The Biker Scout is bigger than it is supposed to be, so I'm very curious to see if the scale is right on this one. :)
What you mean, bigger than it is supposed to be?
On site it is stated that the scale is 1:12.
After downscaling, I tried to compare by boots and relatively they are the same size.
 
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He's going to turn on you!! :)
 
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What you mean, bigger than it is supposed to be?
On site it is stated that the scale is 1:12.
After downscaling, I tried to compare by boots and relatively they are the same size.
What's stated on a kit is not necessary correct. I printed and assembled the Speeder Bike and the Scout Trooper and both came out much bigger than they were supposed to be:


At 1/12 the trooper should be as tall as the figure.
Shunichi's big R2-D2 kit is stated as 1/6 even though it is 1/8 in reality. This led to major confusion when I started the R5 project and some careful measuring. @Rhaven Blaack rescaled the pattern to produce a 1/32 version but since the real scale was smaller it turned out to be about 1/48.

So if the finished trooper is taller than 11cm the scale is incorrect.
 
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Thank you, Revell-Fan.
I didn't know it is incorrect. But I've already built Speeder bike as it is and I hope Sandtrooper will be same scale whatever it is, if my foot compare counts. Just to keep consistence.
I'll measure the height when figure will be assembled.
And you did a very nice version too. Clean and perfect build!
 
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Thanks

A small update:

I worked on the leg armor and the ammunition belt.

Because the ammunition pouches became smaller due to downscaling, I removed the top and bottom flaps and glued the edges together using super glue.

It’s a good idea to label each part with its number to avoid confusion when assembling the left and right sides.

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First of all, the figure already above 11 cm, so Revell-Fan you are right - the scale is incorrect. But as I wrote earlier - I'll continue as is to keep consistence

The next step was the arms, shoulders, and some armor details on the torso.

I glued everything together and assembled the shoulders intuitively, because shoulder parts 7 and 15 have a smaller diameter than upper arm parts 8 and 16.

This is how I attached them to the torso, following the shape of the markings, including the armor supports.

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Then I moved on to shaping the arm armor.

Strangely, the supports were too thick, so I removed some layers.
On the left upper arm, however, I removed them completely because the armor was only slightly wider than the arm itself… maybe this trooper was left-handed with an especially strong left arm ;)

But then I noticed I had made a mistake — the left arm was pointing too low compared to the reference drawings.

I had to remove it and reglue part 15 again, this time starting from the inner right edge of the arm. After correcting the mistake, the arm began pointing in the proper direction.

Now I’m not entirely sure about the right arm. The drawings make it difficult to understand because the viewing angles are too wide. I even tried assembling those two parts again using regular paper just to check whether they could be connected differently, but it seems there is only one possible way on the right side.

I decided that the next step will be assembling the weapon and the hands with fingers, just to verify that the blaster can be positioned correctly in the arms.

I also tried to photograph the arms from every angle for future reference — just in case I positioned something incorrectly.

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