West Tek T-60 Power Armor ( Fallout 4 )

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First of all, I need to thank some people: arboriginal for giving me the push I was needing to finally tackle this long wanted project by posting his 200% FO Joe, rbuckbailey for creating the figure that inspired this project and served as inspiration for a lot of the joints, and amshuma94 for creating a figure that served as a great reference on how to convert Bethesda's model into a articulated figure. That wouldn't be possible without you guys! All the parts should already be oriented for optimal printing. Print with 5+ walls and low infill (about 15%) and it will be strong without using too much filament (I used about 250g for the entire figure). The arm and leg parts need to be reversed and printed twice, pretty easy to do on the slicer, but I can upload already turned part files if anyone is having difficulty. Building is pretty straight foward, there's only some points to consider. The arm rings go on the holes where the shoulders will fit. They act as a bushing, and can be glued on place. Smear a small quantity of superglue on the inside of the ring if you want a tighter fit arm. The leg pins should work well and don't need to be glued, they will press fit just fine, but I recomend using M3 machine screws instead of the provided arm pins. Choose if you want the jetpack prior to printing, the back part should be glued on the torso, and the jetpack is attached to it. This figure was build in a way to be exactally 200% the size of fallout joe, so all the awesome weapons and hands it have will fit right on, just print them double the size.  Some people asked me to explain how I painted mine. I don't have steps pictures as I wasn't planing on this but here we go. Of course I made it sort of a BOS Paladin version, I couldn't make the chest badge but the wrist insignia is there. It's a ABS print.I've started with a full coat of spray can metalic graphite. The red, tan and brown details were hand brushed. The silver and black details were hand brushed with spray can paint, just release the paint inside the can's cap and use a brush. The hands were spray painted silver. For the distressed metal look, I took the coarse (green) side of a kitchen sponge, sprayed it silver, then quickly brushed it where I wanted the effect. The rust spots on the minigun were made with the same technic. For giving the grime look on the low spots and sealing everything up, I mixed a little bit of black paint on a cup of water, dipped all the parts on the cup for a few seconds, then let dry. The heat glow on the barrels of the minigun were then spray painted with the barrel rotating on a electric drill.Is actually pretty simple, it just needs a good dose of patience, rushing up any of the steps will ruin it. Have fun!

About the author:
Marcus_GT500
3D Designer and RC afficionado. Message me if you need your rad ideas turned into even radder projects! Contact me on fb.com/mvdesigncw

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