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Every once in a while, I come across a piece of information that model builders might find useful. This does me absolutely no good, because I really don't spend much time building 3D models these days, so I thought it might be a good idea to share what little wisdom I might impart somewhere. I figured this is as good a place as any. From time to time, I will try to post little tips and tricks I've managed to come up with, as well as tidbits that will make it easier to understand how some specific airplanes work. The benefit to spending a decade or so in factories, and a great deal of that time as a machine operator, is that I am well-versed in how to read blueprints, and how machines are actually assembled, maintained, and operated. It is my hope that some of that mechanical know-how may be of some benefit to the reader.
My first tip is a simple one. Ronnie Darko had a simple rule when he was president, and it's as potent to the model builder as it is to the commander-in-chief:
Trust, but verify.
Treat all reference materials that are not manufacturer's blueprints with scrutiny. Be especially suspect of anything in operations or maintenance manuals. These diagrams are meant to give the operator a good idea of what things look like. They are not necessarily accurate. The station diagrams found in the 737-200 maintenance manual, for example, provide an excellent resource if you need to know the X or Y values of particular points (i.e. the floor, window centreline, lobe crease, positions of stations along the longitudinal axis, position of the wing, and so on). Don't trust them for the contours of the airplane for a second. The resolution ain't that great. But if you use them in conjunction with the very accurate CAD drawings available on Boeing's website (free!), you'll be on your way to a very accurate model.
On the subject of 737 station diagrams - Boeing, unlike Convair or Douglas, is lazy. If you use the Y-values to build your model, you will end up with a 737-100 unless you were paying attention. Note stations 500, 500A, 500B, 727, 727A, and 727B. Boeing didin't give new coordinates, they just added the new stations in and put an "A" or "B" to denote that they're new. You will have to adjust the Y-values for every body station past 500, and again past station 727. All station values on Boeing, Douglas, Lockheed, and Convair diagrams are in inches. Airbus diagrams will be in metres. The others make it easy for you and just give you the correct values. Beware!
Oh, yeah, don't trust blueprints, either. You'd be amazed at how many changes that occur in the factory don't show up on blueprints (that was my experience with manufacturing buses, anyway). Double check every source with other sources, such as photographs, measurements, and so on. If you're in doubt, and you're building a 737, pick up a DACO model. They were made from measurements of Sabena 737s and are very accurate - but remember that scaling up from 1/144 will produce a certain degree of inaccuracy in your measurements.
My first tip is a simple one. Ronnie Darko had a simple rule when he was president, and it's as potent to the model builder as it is to the commander-in-chief:
Trust, but verify.
Treat all reference materials that are not manufacturer's blueprints with scrutiny. Be especially suspect of anything in operations or maintenance manuals. These diagrams are meant to give the operator a good idea of what things look like. They are not necessarily accurate. The station diagrams found in the 737-200 maintenance manual, for example, provide an excellent resource if you need to know the X or Y values of particular points (i.e. the floor, window centreline, lobe crease, positions of stations along the longitudinal axis, position of the wing, and so on). Don't trust them for the contours of the airplane for a second. The resolution ain't that great. But if you use them in conjunction with the very accurate CAD drawings available on Boeing's website (free!), you'll be on your way to a very accurate model.
On the subject of 737 station diagrams - Boeing, unlike Convair or Douglas, is lazy. If you use the Y-values to build your model, you will end up with a 737-100 unless you were paying attention. Note stations 500, 500A, 500B, 727, 727A, and 727B. Boeing didin't give new coordinates, they just added the new stations in and put an "A" or "B" to denote that they're new. You will have to adjust the Y-values for every body station past 500, and again past station 727. All station values on Boeing, Douglas, Lockheed, and Convair diagrams are in inches. Airbus diagrams will be in metres. The others make it easy for you and just give you the correct values. Beware!
Boeing 737-200 body station diagram (from AMM)
Oh, yeah, don't trust blueprints, either. You'd be amazed at how many changes that occur in the factory don't show up on blueprints (that was my experience with manufacturing buses, anyway). Double check every source with other sources, such as photographs, measurements, and so on. If you're in doubt, and you're building a 737, pick up a DACO model. They were made from measurements of Sabena 737s and are very accurate - but remember that scaling up from 1/144 will produce a certain degree of inaccuracy in your measurements.





