Okay, moving forward...
I thought I'd do a deeper dive into the construction of the gondolas. So here's a bit of a step-by-step. This is just the processes involved; every process involves at least one sketch, which is the time consuming bit as you try to interpret the references and make an accurate part. These sketches and processes tend to layer on top of each other, so if you find out you did something wrong earlier in the design, it can break subsequent steps, which means you've got to go back and repair things, so it can be a tedious process. Tl;dr: it's not as easy as it looks


I decided to start with the main windows. You have to start somewhere, and they seemed like a fairly central detail to 'hang' subsequent operations on.

(hard to see, but) next is a loft underneath, to blend the main, square section of window with the bottom of the gondola.

Then the front bottom of the gondola is extruded with a slight taper.

...and cut to shape.

The mid section is extruded from the roughed out front section.

And the various sketches completed so I can create a loft for the aft end of the gondola. The cross-sectional sketches form, well, the cross-sections of the loft, but they have to be told where to go, or else they'll simply take the straightest path (or occasionally, a random, wild path...). This requires additional sketches floating in space, to connect the cross sections. It's actually a bit of a process to create these - flat planes are simple to trace, but sketches that are fully 3D end up requiring a ton of preparation and tweaking to perfect. I'll often extrude, cut and loft temporary bodies so I can trace their (3D) outlines to get the necessary 3D sketch... then delete the bodies and use the resulting sketch to guide the loft.

All that prep work done, the loft is completed. I only did one half as it was easier to force the loft to do what I wanted. I can mirror it later.

The roof is then extruded...

... and the entire model gets chopped in half. This wasn't my original plan (or else I'd only have done one side of the front section) but after screwing around with the loft for a while, I decided it was the best option. Doing two lofts side by side ran the risk of causing problems meshing with the rest of the model; mirroring just the loft might have worked, but in the end, cutting it in half gives me a single, flat surface I can use to mirror the other side, for a simpler construction. It boosts the file size a bit, since it's more process-intensive, but I felt it was worth it.

Mirrored. The final step to rough-out the gondola is to create a loft at the front of the roof. This is a great example of using sketches to 'force' the loft into place - I'm trying to merge a triangle into a weird, six-sided shape. Each of those grey lines tells the loft to go from point A to point B. Without them it would fail, as it can't reconcile the the 'start' and 'end' sketches.

And the gondola is roughed out. This completed body is then duplicated so that I can add details. One body is hollowed out to create the main part of the gondola. The other body is shelled outwards, adding thickness, so that I can model the raised surface details.

Here you can see a portion of the outward shelled body cut away, exposing the window area.

The ribs are then cut out and merged with the main body. I now have raised ribs on a hollow gondola.

Time for some windows. The rear, open section is cut out.

Front windows are recessed.

Front windows are then cut out. I've left a .25mm lip around each pane to fit a piece of acetate, once printed.

The left side's windows then get mirrored onto the right, and the front window is cut out.

And the side windows are done in the same manner.

The access hatch is cut in the roof. Incidentally, most Zeppelin kits seem to include this as a 'tube' between the gondola and envelope; this doesn't seem to be correct, from my readings. As far as I can tell, it was open there, so you'd get a blast of icy air traversing the Zeppelin.

This solid bit is added. Not quite sure what to call it - it covers the connections between the gondola and the airship.

Finally, the rear bumper is added and the gondola is complete. I'm probably not going to detail the interior of this one; you really can't see it on the finished Q class, so there isn't much point.