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Post by Vermin King on May 13, 2016 16:09:26 GMT -9
Somehow, I seem to remember someone building this and saying it was 'just under HO scale, but close enough', but judging by the door on the annex, I think it is larger than HO scale. Wouldn't have to be enlarged much. Were you able to find the other three churches?
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Post by wyvern on May 14, 2016 4:25:16 GMT -9
Somehow, I seem to remember someone building this and saying it was 'just under HO scale, but close enough', but judging by the door on the annex, I think it is larger than HO scale. Wouldn't have to be enlarged much. Were you able to find the other three churches? Hadn't checked what the original scale was. Looking at the PDF now, the pages appear to be A4-sized, and a quick on-screen measure (not from a printout, so be warned!) suggests the sacristy door is about 24mm tall, while the top of the main chapel's door-arch is 30mm. That suggests HO-scale would be about right, assuming an ordinary-ish door height for the sacristy. There are actually just two other churches - so three in total. Checking today using the same WaybackMachine pages suggests only the red-brick Yorkshire church has survived intact, as I couldn't find a link for the Aegean "white" church's PDFs. There are three PDF files for the red-brick church, one of parts, two of instructions, and clicking on the illustration on this page will take you to the preserved portal page for them (I have downloaded these PDFs just now as well, incidentally, so the links do work!).
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Post by Vermin King on Dec 19, 2017 20:00:15 GMT -9
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shep
Eternal Member
Red Alert! Shields up! LENS FLARE!!!
Posts: 1,260
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Post by shep on Dec 20, 2017 2:35:15 GMT -9
Do you know a way to translate the linked download page? My Japanese is quite rusty or should I say non-existant?
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Post by Vermin King on Dec 20, 2017 5:07:15 GMT -9
I use Chrome for pages I need to translate
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