| Model
Airplane Color Design
Deciding
on the colour and pattern design of your latest model masterpiece can
often be quite a tricky process. It's not always that easy to be sure
just how your ideas might look on the finished model, and sometimes you
might just wish you could pre-view and compare various colour combinations before
committing yourself to spending what can be quite a bit of money on
those precious covering materials.
Well, William Busto's Model Airplane
Color Design website offers you just that possibility! From this
site you can download some quite delightful software that allows you to
'paint' your own colour designs onto model profiles and then view them
in full 3D.
MACD is a PC program that helps design
paint schemes for r/c aircraft. It really is very easy to use, and if
you have used paint programs before you will will already know exactly
how to go about using this one. William Busto started this
program a couple of years ago as a means of helping his fellow modellers
and himself visualize colour schemes for their models and it has come a
long way since then.
On offer are four separate MACD programs, each
featuring a different basic model profile - a sport high winger, a sport
low winger, a CAP232 style aerobatic and a pattern plane. Downloading
and installing the programs is simplicity itself, with extremely professional routines
and an installation wizard that instals the selected program and puts a
short-cut on your desktop for quick and easy launching. Downloading time
is in the region of 3½ minutes for each program and installation time
is just a second or two.
On
running each program, you are presented with a smart opening screen
showing a rotating view of the chosen plane (the example shown here is
the sport high winger). Two clicks of the mouse and you are through to
the control panel - choose paint booth and up comes this screen
on the right for you to start work on the fuselage colour scheme. Click on the color
button, pick up a colour from the colour palette that then appears and
you can apply that colour to any of the different pattern areas by
moving the little spray-gun icon within the required area and left-clicking. The images on the screen immediately change to display your
newly-applied colour. If you want to see the full effect of your handiwork at this stage, just
toggle the rotate/stop button or
simply left click and drag on the left-hand plane image and you can move
the plane around its axes, smooth as silk!
When you have applied all your colours to the
fuselage, a click on the next button moves you on to the next
screen for the right wing. Repeat the process and move through
successive screens
for the left wing, right and left stabilisers, wheel pants, struts and
spinner. Right click to return to the control panel at any stage, select view
model and up comes a display of the finished model, in full 3D (left).. Two very smart little sets of mouse-driven controls allow you
to rotate about any axis, zoom in and out, and move left, right, up or
down.
Open a second application of the
program, re-size the windows and you can make side-by-side comparisons
of alternative schemes - fantastic!
Further options in the program allow you to
'fly' the plane by joystick or mouse on a plain background and you can drop in a
background to the view screens to see your model against a scenery
background - you can even substitute the default background bitmap for one of your
own flying field (or any other bitmap) just for fun and extra realism!
Colour schemes can be saved and William
is developing the program to allow schemes to be sent directly to the
printer, but you can achieve much the same result by taking a screen
shot with the Print Screen button on your keyboard, pasting it
into Paint or your favourite graphics program and printing it out from
there.
This free software is excellent - delightful and
fun to use, smooth in action, with good strong colours and a good Help
facility. I have downloaded all four programs and just love to play
around with them, even though I'm not looking for a colour scheme right
now!
One other thing - amongst the links provided on
the site there are two interesting articles specifically to do with
choice of colours for r/c aircraft - don't miss them!
You can find the site, the software, hints and
tips and other interesting links at
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/wbusto/
Thank you very much, William, for this useful
and thoroughly enjoyable software - congratulations on a superb production!
With acknowledgement to Alan
Tong's R/C links website, where I found the link to this site.
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