It looks like my progress has been better than I thought - the Princeton should be finished tomorrow!

The bit that looks like a windsock which fell foul of a tornado is the beginning of the secondary hull. I find it easier to use thin strips of paper rather than sitting cutting endless tiny triangles. The paper strips are ~1mm wide btw.

The secondary hull suffered major damage at each end so many of the strips weren't used and the deflector didn't have to be built.

I've used the paper sheet of battle damage that I printed. Before I glue the rim of the missing chunks, I scrunch up a cut section of damage, unfold it and then push it into any nooks and crannies in the cut out chunks with a fingernail. When the glue is
almost dry I cut around the edges of the paper at an angle so that the cuts are not clean, but look kind of ripped, and then blacken the edges and try to leach black into the surround of the holes. The scissors shown only cut cleanly if the blades are perpendicular to the surface being cut, and the frayed edges produced by angling the blades is particularly effective at this scale.

These are the last pieces that need to be cut from the original design; they are additional detailing for the upper nacelles. I've filled the damage holes of each of the major sections (primary and secondary hulls and the three nacelles) before joining them and now I'm only left with one nacelle's detailing to shred a bit at the back, and the other nacelle waiting to have a substantial hole torn out before it is attached.

I'll have to construct some type of base before making any more ships. We have five crazy dogs and I don't like to have any ships lying around waiting to be mounted as the youngest dog (aka The Doomsday Machine) has a tendency to flatten stuff!