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This scale has been used for fictional spacecraft for the board game Star Cruiser, originally from Citadel Miniatures. A set of British and German WWII warships in this scale were produced by CnC for use in the North Cape tabletop game. 1:3900: 0.078 mm: Sci-fi: Star Trek toys and miniatures are available in this scale. 1:3000: 0.102 mm: Sci-fi ...
One scale foot is equivalent to approximately 12/200 of an inch, 0.06 inches and 1.524 millimetres. One scale yard is equivalent to approximately 1/36 of an inch, 0.18 inches and 4.572 millimetres. Figure scale is 8 mm generally squared off to 1/190 – 1/220 scale. 10 mm: ≈1.667 mm - ≈1.9 mm: ≈1:182 - 1:160
Both classes used the same studio model, differing in sizes in proportion to other starships depending on variant. The B'rel-class is a scout vessel, used for espionage, skirmishes and raids, while the K'Vort-class is a light cruiser. Both classes are armed with disruptor cannons mounted on the tips of the wings and a forward torpedo launcher.
Note: to interpret the number in the left-hand column, these examples illustrate: 3.5 mm scale (HO): 3.5 mm scale measurement = 1 foot (304.8 mm) prototype. The ratio is therefore 1:87.08571, usually reported as 1:87. 1 in scale: 1 in scale measurement = 1 foot prototype, the ratio is reported as 1:12.
1:144 scale is a scale used for some scale models such as micro/mini armor. 1:144 means that the dimensions of the model are 1/144 (0.00694) the dimensions of the original life-sized object; this equates to a scale of 1/2 inch per 6 feet of original dimension. For instance, an airplane 30 feet (9.14 m) in length would be a mere 2.5 inches (63.5 ...
The C-57D was recreated as a large-scale miniature kit by Polar Lights in 2001 and was labeled as being a 1:72 scale, injection-molded, all-plastic model kit, which is 28 inches (71 cm), a scale of 168 feet (51 m) in diameter; 1:72 is a standard international plastic aircraft model scale. The kit included complete "under the dome" interior crew ...
Starship Dimensions (to-scale size comparisons) Starship Size Comparison Chart 1 (Dan Carlson, 13 July 2003) Starship Size Comparison Chart 2 (Dan Carlson, 30 October 2003) Starship Names (a Sci-Fi wiki article, outside Wikipedia)
The scales used include the general European modelling range of Z, N, TT, H0, 0 and also the large model engineering gauges of I to X, including 3 + 1 ⁄ 2, 5, 7 + 1 ⁄ 4 and 10 + 1 ⁄ 4-inch gauge. As 00 is a particularly British scale, it is not included within this pan-European standard. However the predominantly US imperial-based S scale ...