Thursday, July 30, 2020

How I fixed my not Lego version of Jerac's Tie Bomber - Part Two

Hey there, welcome back to the Bricks and Figs blog, where I post about my not Lego MOCs, Mods, and Minifigs.  Don't forget to check out my other blog called Its-Not-Lego where I give you honest opinions about my latest not Lego set acquisitions.

Today, we will take a look at some modifications I made to the knockoff/bootleg version of Jerac's Tie Bomber.  Check out all of the build pics here.

As I previously mentioned during the building of the non branded Jerac's Tie Bomber, there were a number of issues I found.  Most were related to the poor brick clutch of the off brand bricks, and those are easily rectified.  The one area where I tried to improve the design was the angled corner pieces that make up the tapered engine cowling.  I just want to point out that I have absolutely no issues with the look of the engine cowlings, just the method of implementation.

For reference let's take a closer look at the area in question.  The little T-joints at each of the corners of the fuselage are where you clip the curved bricks for the tapering.  Admittedly, there's not enough clutch for the clips to grab onto the T-joints.

The result is that anytime you accidentally touch the curved corners, they fall off immediately as evidenced in the picture above.

To mitigate the problem, I decided to attach the curved corner directly to the fuselage using the two piece connected plate.  The lower part of the pic shows you how the curved piece was originally connected.

Here is the result of the fix.  The curved brick can still tilt inwards, but it's more sturdy and won't fall off.  Note that this solution works perfectly for all four corners of rear engines.  Unfortunately my brick stash didn't have enough of those two piece joiner plates, so I've had to order the extra parts so I can re-work the bottom corners of the fuselages.


There are two more similar connection points at the front of the ship above the cockpit, but those seem to be sturdy enough so I kept the original setup there.

Since we are looking at the cockpit, as I mentioned in the Tie Bomber build post, the provided windscreen of this knockoff set was just a plain 6x6 circular part with no design. I've temporarily subbed in the 6x6 glass from the Sanctum Santorum roof until I can find a replacement Tie Cockpit windscreen.

Another change I made was at the lower hinge that attaches the windscreen to the fuselage.  I swapped out the single clip for a double clip plate, so now the windscreen doesn't fall off anymore.

Speaking of things falling off, the technic plate that attaches the engine flames to the engine would not stay attached.  I added a single round stud in between the connection and that fixed the problem.

One can barely notice the difference.

More bits that fell off include the circular plates attached to the wing detail.  To rectify this, I first attached the circular piece to a 2x2 plate and then attached that to the wing.

This is what it looks like now.


Finally, the last issue I had was also clutch related. There's four triangular sections on each wing that kept falling off due to poor clutch of the stud brick.

 I replaced each of those bricks, eight in total, with a technic pinned brick.

Problem solved!

With all these fixes in place I can display and swoosh the model without the worry of losing any parts.  I've already ordered replacement blue gray curved pieces to replace the dark gray plates that clad the hull of the Tie Bomber.

Please enjoy the rest of the pics!














Thanks for taking time out from your busy day to check out the pics of this knockoff version of the awesome Tie Bomber originally designed and built by Jerac.  What did you think of the fixes?  Did you have similar issues with your non branded Jerac Tie Bomber?  Please let me know in the comment box below. See you next time!

Building Jerac's Tie Bomber using not Lego bricks.



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