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omarcs

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    Bloomington Illinois USA

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  1. my excuse for no pictures is that I am actually working on the ship . I am using a dowel and copper wire, harder than i anticipated. I do have the 4 loops made and glued. I drilled a hole through the dowel and am running copper wire through the hole. I twisted the wire into 2 loops from 1 piece of wire. 2 strands of wire works pretty good, while 4 strands is too many. The dowel is too big in diameter so I am working on getting it slimmer. it is good to be working on the ship. Omar
  2. Hello friends!!! The hobby car is 99.9% complete most days so I decided the ship has been patient long enough and I need to get back to work. The first task was to figure out where I was and then to decide on the next task. I decided to work on the bow area. I have been browsing my store of reference material and the internet. I think I am safe to start on bowsprit and gammoning. When finished they won't be in the way of subsequent work. After this work my intention is to place eye bolts on bow. I finished, I hope, the dauphin striker. The kit version was not satisfactory, and after the stem accident tore it up, I had no reason not to try for better. I have managed "different". I may need to try it again. I am using styrene and thin wire so it is easy to build. I will post pictures of effort #1. Omar
  3. How time flies. Over 2 years. I did not realize it had been so long. I added a few items to the ship this week: 1. freeing ports made from card stock. I was going to use very thin balsa until I realized how out of scale they would be. 2.The grates at the helmsman station. I had saved some copper screen from who knows what that gave me a reasonable grate at my scale. a 10mm X 10 mm is too small for me to make out of wood. Obviously I did not perish at sea. The ship sits on my work table along with an alien space ship still under construction, but I have been putting my creative time into my 1967 Barracuda. It is finally at the final few adjustments to linkages and I now am ready to do more work on my ship. Omar
  4. as usual, I see your work and must make changes to mine Cutty. I have my boats made but I think your clinker method will greatly enhance them. Instead of working on Cutty, I continue to work on my 1967 one owner car. 5 years and very close to completion. 50 years and 200,000 miles (321,868 kilometer) took their toll.
  5. as some one else said: Boeier, because it is so unusual Or I would pick the cross section - only chance to get at least a piece of such a ship, because due to the enormous size
  6. your work is always worth waiting for. and now to go back to my little boats and add more detail. Omar
  7. once again you raise the bar. It is a very satisfying to work smaller and smaller getting finer detail. Welcome back Omar
  8. Hello!! The ship is on my work table and I have been working on other project instead of her. My energy primarily goes to my 1967 Barracuda. It has been a long restoration and I want to start her up this spring. I bought her new and she has over 200,000 miles and had a lot of things to do to get her up and running So I have satisfied the ship itch by watching the work of others Omar
  9. I really like the jig. Being able to screw items to it while making your ship looks extremely helpful I am looking at page 1 for this comment. Great build
  10. I started making eyebolts from the finest wire. Harder to do than thicker wire. I am not soldering them, just a tight twist. I will be gluing them into a hole so I am hoping the glue will suffice. The outside dimension of the loop is 1mm.
  11. I have not been doing much with ship except feeling guilty. But I have completed some model train projects, and continue to work on my 1967 Barracuda restoration. The photos are of work last done. Normal angst of is it good enough, or should I try again. I did decide I needed to install a bunch of eye rings thanks to Nenad's drawings. That started the question of whether the eyes I have made are small enough. I found the Artistic Wire in a discount store and tried and liked it. The photo of the wire spool has one of my first eyes and below it is an eye made with smaller wire and a needle to size hole. The photo with scale compares the art wire to wire from a transformer that used to reside in my microwave until the push buttons failed. I don't think I need to look for anything smaller. With the 3 gauges I think I am set. The transformer wire should be perfect for eyes on masts and yards.
  12. You have a picture of the deck and what struck me is that is what it looks like - a worn deck. Everything it the photo looks right. You just keep raising the bar! Omar
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