Come on people, you shouldn't be so eager to assume someone is trying to do something malicious just by calling a TO over to clarify.
If you call a TO over to a minor model modification and the TO agrees with you there are only two possible outcomes: the model is replaced or the player is disqualified. If you're not after one of those two, why call the TO?
There's nothing wrong with wanting to play against against models that are accurate to the game, so your assumption that no one would ever have a reason to go after the first result is provably false. This game derives a lot of its appeal from the fact that it features ships that are recognizable from the films and EU. If you alter your ship such that it's no longer recognizable from the original source (which means changing the size or shape), than you are potentially lessening the enjoyment of the game for a lot of people (myself included). Another reason is that this is a game with pieces provided whose visual appearance function to aid players in distinguishing the pieces from a distance of 4+ feet (the length of the game board plus the height of the player) without having to strain themselves.
Yes you own the models and have every right to do whatever you want with them, but FFG owns the tournament rules, and when you play in a tournament, you are agreeing to play by FFG's rules or not play at all. And the rules are clear:
If you change the size or shape of your models, a TO has the right to tell you to use acceptable models. So either bring acceptable models in addition to your modified ones, or get your modified ones cleared with the TO first.
Honestly, if you get booted from a tournament because you didn't do either of those very simple things, you can't blame your opponent for getting DQ'd. You did it to yourself.





