Science Fiction

 

Project Backstep Chronosphere

from "Seven Days" (UPN 1996-2001)

SCALE: 1:72

INITIAL RELEASE: 2012

MEDIUM: Resin

RARITY: (2)

 

 

 

 

ABOUT THE DESIGN

ABOUT THE KIT

The Chronosphere was the one-man time-travel vessel at the center of Project Backstep, a top-secret time-travel project operated by the National Security Agency (NSA) out of its secured Never Never Land facility somewhere in Nevada. Based on alien technology acquired from a spaceship downed outside Roswell, N.M. in 1947, the Chronosphere cannot itself travel through time, but is "projected" into the past. The maximum distance it can travel: seven days. '

Because Earth is always moving (rotating on its axis, revolving around the sun, etc.), targeting the sphere to its temporal point-of-entry is extremely difficult and requires the "chrononaut" on board to constantly readjust its heading in all four dimensions.

Once a time-travel mission is completed, the sphere is recovered by Project Backstep operatives and returned to Never Never Land for its next "flight."

The Project Backstep Sphere is, obviously, not a sphere at all.  It is, to be precise a Truncated Dodecahedron made of 20 hexagons and 12 pentagons.

This 1:72 Chronosphere was released by Millennium Models International (MMI) in 2012. Made from more than two dozen separate hexagons (plus a single "window" piece), the model's components were designed in CAD and then printed via stereolithography.

This model was built from a preview edition of the kit.

 

Original Box Art

 

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