I rather watch this than all the depressing stuff that comes up on RU-vid you are a master of your craft . I bow deeply in respect to you what else you got
Only the main body is a kit from Hachette (Japan). The LEDs, sound effects, and motors for the movement are made by a 3D printer and my own program. You can see some of them in the past videos I have posted.
I bought a set because of your video. Then I did more research, it has really minimum auto movement. What did you do? Did you buy extra motor and else?
This is based on a display model released by Hachette (Japan), which I modified as a hobby. The LEDs, MP3 sound, and step motor operation are controlled by a microcontroller board.
Thanks for your comment. It is easy to connect to an external speaker via Bluetooth, but in this modification, five speakers are installed inside the body. The purpose is to sound near where each LED emits light. This system was built with like a ”3-dimensional” sound.
This is a kit from Hachette (Japan), but unfortunately it is no longer available. And the action in the video was made by myself with 3D-printer, the actual kit does not move.
@@0122Lotus I'm kind of old school so when I was a little kid in the seventies the only anime that came on was Robotech at like 6:00 5:30 in the morning on Sundays that looks like the battleship it's been so long I can't remember the name but that is an awesome piece of work
This is a kit from Hachette (Japan), but unfortunately it is no longer available. And the action in the video was made by myself with 3D-printer, the actual kit does not move.
What is the scale please? I want to wargame a spaceship game and I think Yamato would be the only franchise with small enough ships to launch actual fighter models.
Thank you.@@0122Lotus I wisht there weren't so many "non scale" Yamato kits, need about 1/3000 I think. There used to be metal Yamato miniatures in the '80s and a ruleset, can anyone remember the name?
@0122Lotus 2 週間前 This is based on a display model released by Hachette (Japan), which I modified as a hobby. The LEDs, MP3 sound, and step motor operation are controlled by a microcontroller board.
This is a kit from Hachette (Japan), but unfortunately it is no longer available. And the action in the video was made by myself with 3D-printer, the actual kit does not move.
They appear in a Japanese animation called Space Battleship Yamato 2205. In the U.S., they are called "star blazers. It is based on a kit from Hachette (Japan), to which I added LEDs, sound effects, and actions using step motors, controlled by a small computer.
Sorry,I am not familiar with actual ships. I understand that this model is an aircraft carrier converted from the battleship of the previous Yamato 2202.
@@0122Lotus This version is much older, it was already seen in the second season of the original Yamato 1974 anime. Maybe inspired on a russian 1972 warship.
@@sardaukerlegion DCV-01 Hyuga is an entirely new battle carrier design from the 3rd season of the remake Space Battleship Yamato 2199, which was a loose adaptation of the 1979 TV movie Yamato: The New Voyage. It is a member of a 3-ship flotilla consisting of the Yamato and the supply carrier DAOE-01 Asuka. Both Hyuga and Asuka were heavily modified versions of the Dreadnought design from the second season of the reboot, which was (very loosely) based on the second season of the original 1974 show. As far as inspiration goes, since this is a Japanese show the design was probably inspired by the Battleship Ise, which was converted to a hybrid carrier towards the end of WWII. If you're a fan of the original show, you should 100% definitely hunt down the reboot to watch. They did an incredible job updating the first season, and while the second and third aren't as faithful, they are still very good.