Back to the blaster. First phase was building the scratch built parts and assembly, then upgrading to the orange button version and fixing the telescope barrel length.
This next phase is to complete the assembly and set it up to look like how it did when it was sent to Daydream Studios.
From this:
to this:
1) trigger painted red
2) tape over logos with runes
3) metal greeblies under the receiver
Easy enough!
1) Red button
ConvergenceProp feels this red is probably regular old Testors red and I agree. Except I had a spray can of a very similar red already on the shelf so I decided to give it a shot and I'm happy with it.
My plan was to open up the handle grip and paint the trigger button without having to mask, but for the life of me I could not get enough torque on those little screws to take it apart. They were starting to strip so I gave up and just masked it off.
2) tape with runes
We have a better than usual blurry shot of the Kaiser logo on the shoulder sling with a strip of tape over it with some kind of markings...
Then the grip also has tape over it but the markings are even more unclear...
almost looks like regular black marker that got wet and blurred up in purplish hues.
But the ST/PP1 appears to also have regularly spaced markings for this part...
the PP2 here looks blank at first but I feel like there is a faint hint of markings there that could be similar.
Both instances on the grip and shoulder sling look like the same sort of style markings on the jetpacks and the ESB helmet made by combining letters off a letraset sheet. I have no confirmation that's what this is, but it seems the best explanation I can think of, so I am going with that. I happen to have a letraset in Folio Condensed Bold 14 pt, and it is just about the perfect size for both set of markings, so this is what I'll use...
I thought
tennantlim made an excellent guess at the markings on the sling area (
his post).
I'm gonna take my own guess at it and say it could also be something like this:
It's anybody's guess and no one is right or wrong. I was a little sloppy on the transfer of characters. My first time doing a letraset transfer. I just want to emphasize, with both of these labels I am making a fiction. It's just a guess at something that might be similar to what was on the real prop. No confirmations or indications of correctness here... for one, the markings are a tad too small...
For the grip label, I feel like the original got a lot of the markings rubbed off, smudged or covered up by the paint job and weathering, and it's extremely difficult to even tell what is there at all with the photos available, so it's even more of a guess than the sling...
Hopefully with paint and weathering I can get that to look a little more like those blurry reference photos. That's the idea anyway.
3) The metal greeblies underneath
I spent some time trying to find something for the complex one on the right. It has a feel of some kind of valve, especially the triangular shape in the middle with its airflow form for a sealing gasket sorta vibe.
Here's an old Schrader valve. Not the same obviously, but just has that same sort of look. Could be something similar to this, just maybe something more specific-use and most probably rare. These schrader valves are ubiquitous...
I estimate the part to be about 22mm long for the portion sticking out of the gun, and somewhere in the ballpark of 5mm wide or so. I haven't found anything that matches it yet, but I do think it's a found part.
So I decided to make a stand-in until the part is discovered or revealed. I went with some brass valve cores. These are the short type.
I just cut them up and rearranged the parts. They have a central rod that holds the assembly together with a spring inside. This ended up about 5mm wide and 22mm long.
For the other part, the plain rod, I estimated that to be about 3mm wide and 18mm in length. You know what else is 3mm wide and is just a plain stainless steel rod? The cutoff from the Pulce 40 speargun trigger rod.
I cut about 30mm off the end of the Pulce 40 trigger rod so that left about 18mm of plain unthreaded rod to leave sticking out of the blaster.
And that's all, except one more consideration.
I do think it's very clear the blaster was delivered with the grip handle on backwards.
This might seem innocuous, but I don't have any reason to believe the team at Daydream would've reoriented the grip before painting it. For those unfamiliar, the modular nature of the sling attachment and the grip make it possible to reverse the grip orientation so the button can be facing forward or backward.
I do think this matters, because if it was painted with the trigger facing backwards, then I would want to paint it that way, too, and re-orient it forward afterwards.
I'll look more into that for the next phase, which is painting it -- finally. For now, it's ready for delivery to Daydream Studios...