I'm calling this one finished! Despite its size, this was an absolutely fun model to build. All of the issues were self inflicted - mainly my rushing ahead and gluing some structural supports before getting all the other supports and structures lined up properly. Most of the parts will press together firmly and cleanly, so there's no need to rush and glue.
Very enjoyable build and highly recommended. Plus you get spares (many or a few, depending on the version built). The Paragrafix PE set was a joy to work with and you get spares there, too.


I used both dishes from the Paragrafix PE set - the open frame to communicate to the Earth, the other to communicate with relay satellites as they pass overhead, or with explorers on the surface:

The astronaut at the far right may be afraid of heights, because he's holding on to one of the support beams:

Let's play "find the supervisor" - closeup of the guys going down to the surface. The elevator is free swinging, so even the slightest breeze makes it rotate. I had to wait for the right moment to photograph it. In fact, I just noticed that it swung all the way around one of the beams - ignore that:

Lower cargo section with cargo foreman. There's another astronaut in the elevator:

RANT section"The Spaceship Handbook" gives a total height of the cargo ship at 160ft/48.8m with the landing gear and central leg retracted. This matches published data elsewhere. With the landing gear and central leg extended, the ship would have been
210.8 ft/64.3m. In 1/350 scale, the landed ship should be
183.61mm tall. It was hard to measure properly, but the completed model measures between 250mm and 260mm tall - which (averaging) would make it around 1/250 scale.
I scaled one of the kit images to true 1/350 scale. pretty obvious difference:

Typical Pegasus; they have a very hard time designing kits to match the stated scale, even when the "real" vehicle's size is easy to find with minimal effort. The worst example is the space ship from "When Worlds Collide", which is listed as 1/350 but is closer to 1/500. No excuse here, either - the actual measurements were clearly displayed on the screen for 20-30 seconds.
RANT offI'm declaring this one as a larger, heavier cargo ship used to build bases and long duration stays near the lunar poles. That's why the Earth pointing antenna is aimed at to the horizon.
Thanks for all the helpful comments and for following along!