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USS Eldridge, The Philadelphia Experiment

Started by seadude, January 13, 2013, 05:36:17 PM

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seadude

I doubt this is a project I will be doing anytime in the future, but it has been on my mind because I'm curious if such a model project could be done. If so, then how?
A little history first:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philadelphia_Experiment

If such a model/diorama were to be built by a modeler, then how would it be done?
* Special placement of mirrors to create the invisible effect?
* Special spray painting techniques and colors to get an invisible effect?
........etc., etc.

How would you do it?
Modeling isn't just about how good the gluing or painting, etc. looks. It's also about how creative and imaginative you can be with a subject.
My modeling philosophy is: Don't build what everyone else has done. Build instead what nobody has seen or done before.

The Wooksta!

Use a lot of that resin water stuff and do a ship under way but just a hull shaped impression in the water. 

The ship's invisible, not the water, but it'll show where it is.
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The Plan:
www.whatifmodelers.com/index.php/topic

rickshaw

Well, if I had the money, I'd use a large LCD shuttered monitor.  The LCD is transparent, showing the model behind it until it is then changed to slowly disappear from view, replaced by bare sea.  Need a laptop to run it.
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Mossie

Peppers ghost.  You set up the model in a box out of view, with a piece of glass at an angle.  If the lighting is correct, a ghostly image appears.  If you're clever with electrics you can get the image to appear and dissapear by varying the lighting.  The lighting is the key, as well as the angle you're viewing it at.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pepper's_ghost

Quite effective and not difficult to do, I've seen fantasy models done using the principal.  Trouble is you need to keep external light out and that means keeping the room you're in dark, or using a small slot to view through.
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