Jump to content

10th-11th century Byzantine dromon by Louie da fly - FINISHED - 1:50


Recommended Posts

Very interesting, Carl. I haven't come across this one before. Certainly lateen rigged, and the "wings" at the stern are thought to hold a crosspiece which supports the yard when it's not in use. The hull is very unusual.

 

I wonder where they got the design from? It doesn't look like anything I've seen in contemporary pictures. But there's plenty of stuff out there I've never seen.

 

Steven

Edited by Louie da fly
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just learnt something. I'd thought than on all lateen sails  the halyard attached to the centre of the yard. Certainly a lot of them seem to be this way in contemporary pictures, but if you look at the link http://forum.woodenboat.com/showthread.php?156203-Lateen you can see lateens with what I'd have thought was a very unbalanced set-up. 

 

Oh, and some nice footage of lateeners under sail. Having the mast to leeward of the sail (so it's blown against the mast) doesn't seem to be such a problem after all.

 

A pity there isn't any footage of boats sailing under lateen alone, without headsails (or booms, as some modern so-called "lateens" are).

 

Steven

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Very interesting. Also noted is the quite large lateen sails on hulls that don't look to have much righting moment - or even freeboard - & the wind isn't light (black & white photos at the start).

 

On the rig balance question, I would have thought it's adjustable by changing the spar angle. More horizontal & there is more sail forward, more vertical & the sail is further aft. It would mean multiple sheeting positions so the sail could set well at a range of spar angles, perhaps a line of cleats or pegs along the rail.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, Louie da fly said:

Oh, and some nice footage of lateeners under sail. Having the mast to leeward of the sail (so it's blown against the mast) doesn't seem to be such a problem after all.

THe only reason to switch sides is to avoid chafing the sail and having either to repair, or replace it more often

Carl

"Desperate affairs require desperate measures." Lord Nelson
Search and you might find a log ...

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That makes sense, though I thought it might also affect the performance of the sail (messes with the aerofoil shape). I expect in large, state-owned ships they'd have taken the trouble to move the end of the yard to the other side of the mast whenever they tacked, as shown in the diagrams on the first page of this thread.

 

Sporting sailors probably don't have to worry about it so much because they don't use their boats much. However, the skipper of the caravel replica that sails around the coast in our region says he does it "the way the Arabs do" - without changing sides when he tacks. A lot less hassle, but it does have the downside of chafing.

 

Steven

Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 hours ago, Louie da fly said:

owever, the skipper of the caravel replica that sails around the coast in our region says he does it "the way the Arabs do" - without changing sides when he tacks. A lot less hassle, but it does have the downside of chafing.

 

Steven

This can only be done if the sail is inboard of the shrouds. In mediterranean vessels of the mediaeval period, which I suspect includes the dromon, the sail was outboard of the shrouds (Landstrom and Pryor)

Dick

 

Current build: 

 Le Gros Ventre 1:48 POF   http://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/topic/564-le-gros-ventre-by-woodrat-scale-1-48-pof-1767-french-exploration-vessel/

 

Past builds:

Mycenaean War Galley by Woodrat - 1:48 - Shell first Plank on Frame:https://modelshipworld.com/topic/33384-mycenaean-war-galley-by-woodrat-148-shell-first-plank-on-frame

Venetian round ship 14th century by Woodrat fully framed - 1:40 scalCompleted

https://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/topic/17991-venetian-round-ship-14th-century-by-woodrat-fully-framed-140-scale

Venetian Carrack or Cocha 1/64 by woodrat   https://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/topic/4915-venetian-carrack-or-cocha-164-by-woodrat        completed

United States Frigate Essex 1:64 POF   http://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/topic/4496-usf-essex-by-woodrat-scale-1-64-fully-framed-from-takakjian-plans/ - completed 

Yenikapi12 by Woodrat - 1/16 scale - a small Byzantine merchant vessel of the 9th century

https://modelshipworld.com/topic/23815-yenikapi12-by-woodrat-116-scale-a-small-byzantine-merchant-vessel-of-the-9th-century-finished/

The Incredible Hulc by Woodrat - an experimental reconstruction of a mediaeval transport

https://modelshipworld.com/topic/25641-the-elusive-hulc-by-woodrat-finished-a-speculative-reconstruction-of-a-mediaeval-merchantman-132-plank-on-frame/

 

 

 

Location: Perth, Western Australia

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Here are the sail plans I've arrived at - I still haven't decided to go one or two-masted, but both look better than previous versions. The dimensions no longer tie in with those of Age of the Dromon - I've decided that a gap of 200-300 years and different shipbuilding traditions, plus the different form of the two types of ship are enough to discount the Sicilian ships as a source of information. Instead, I'm going with size and placement of sail(s) to achieve the position of Centre of Effort needed to make a lateener sail properly, based on the theory outlined on the previous page of this build log.

 

20180626_114112.thumb.jpg.6d0193774640c20b4b21d08f4bf60d11.jpg

 

20180626_114146.thumb.jpg.d152df8bf2f82b760d977566ce3df9d9.jpg

 

I've also made a prototype of the Byzantine mast step assembly shown in my reconstruction diagram above. I did this in a hurry and in a poor light, so it's a bit rough. To put in the model I'll do a better job and make it complete - cutting it to width and with side pieces to hold it on the keelson.

 

20180626_113721.thumb.jpg.c494bbced2e0e5db3d142fb0e3004c99.jpg

20180626_174226.thumb.jpg.ee28b79f7f660ea40407405cbc2b5085.jpg  20180627_152712.thumb.jpg.03682661edf3c3ae36e484f6a7a9f80a.jpg

But it seems to work!

20180627_211240.thumb.jpg.9b79c2cfaa69a76bbd82c3935c8dcd7a.jpg

 

20180627_211256.thumb.jpg.d2111b9e9fdd0dc2db1ae3fcaff342d1.jpg

 

Steven  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Steven

 

is the CoE for the 2 sail rig much lower than the single sail rig? The single sail looks to be significantly taller.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mark, the single mast cE is about 2.2 metres (7 feet) taller than the double  - the difference between 9.4 and 7.2 metres above the bottom of the ship - about 30% higher. Don't know how much difference that would make.

 

Steven

Edited by Louie da fly
Link to comment
Share on other sites

We changed the rig on our boat, partly to lower the CoE. Without calculating it I would guess it was lowered between 5 & 10%, & the difference was noticeable. 30% higher would be a large difference, & if my geometry/physics is good, the same force higher up would have more effect on a hull because of it's distance from the pivot point. 

 

What are your thoughts on the role of the sails on these vessels - were they a pleasant respite from the oars or the preferred way of getting around?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's a good reason to go two-masted, Mark. Galleys in general are not too stable.

 

I think sail would be preferable while journeying - assuming the wind was in the right direction, so the ship wouldn't heel over too much.

 

Oars definitely under battle conditions - in fact the masts were lowered and stowed. For maneuvrability and also to remove overhead hazards.

 

Steven 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

I've done a preliminary fitting for the support system I'll be using for the lower oars, to see if it will work. A number of cross-members hold at the correct height a frame with a series of lines all at the same angle, as guides for the oars. The oars go through the oarports with the inner end resting on the frame and the outer end resting on a raised plane (currently two thicknesses of balsa wood) to simulate water level.

 

20180706_201222.thumb.jpg.79b611c33ddf629a915356d6cbcc0c1d.jpg  20180706_201209.thumb.jpg.c2f55abf56af09c6da6bfbb831c628ac.jpg

I've done my best to get all the oars as close to identical as possible, so they'll all be at the same angle vertically when they rest on the frame. Also, they'll be interchangeable so it doesn't matter which one goes where. The other quantity that has to be kept constant is how far the oars poke out from the hull, which is done by simply drawing a pencil line around the circumference of each oar at the point it goes through the oarport.

 

I've only tried it with three pairs of oars so far, but it looks like it will work. Now to get it all done properly, with everything lined up and glued in place. As I mentioned before I won't be putting the oars in till later on in the build so they don't get damaged while I'm working on other parts of the ship.

 

The two mast steps are still in progress - I'm making them like the ones found in the Yenikapi ships. Though they're more complicated than my original version I think it's good to do it the way it was done back in the day if at all possible. The blocking piece is shown above the two mast steps. Sorry about the photo quality.

 

20180706_194455.thumb.jpg.ba8c872951dc4e532ae2707615c8d412.jpg

 

At some point I have to correct the line of the beam shelf - it's a bit wonky and has to be made into a smooth line, or the deck beams - and the deck itself - will also be wonky. As can be seen in the photos, the line wobbles very slightly all along its length.

 

20180706_194156.thumb.jpg.09632f89e8f1482545c86a5e86f70e60.jpg

20180706_194739.thumb.jpg.d9d009634c3234e9159fd2a699defe42.jpg

 

As the beam shelf so narrow and flexible, I can probably correct it by cutting it away from the frames at the offending places and re-glueing it in the correct position. If not, I'll have to cut and fill till it's correct.

 

Steven

 

 

Edited by Louie da fly
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Glad to hear that you have resolved (within yourself) which way top step the masts Steven; that will allow you to move on with other work.  The banking of the oars solution looks very workable with the mock-up looking very good - great idea.

 

cheers

 

Pat

If at first you do not suceed, try, and then try again!
Current build: HMCSS Victoria (Scratch)

Next build: HMAS Vampire (3D printed resin, scratch 1:350)

Built:          Battle Station (Scratch) and HM Bark Endeavour 1768 (kit 1:64)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Working on getting the beam shelf smooth.

 

20180710_211329.thumb.jpg.eeaf356e430bc4cc99a5d0d46b36ce8c.jpg

 

20180710_211859.thumb.jpg.b0fa129f8c17e1effeff342772fffef6.jpg

 

To be honest, the amount of wobble is pretty tiny - maybe 1/2mm - but it does make a difference. To smooth out the curve I've used all three techniques I mentioned earlier - slicing off where it was too high, filling where it's too low, and relocating the beam shelf where it's too far off the line to slice or fill. Still a bit to do before it's all smooth.

 

Next time I do something like this I'll make sure I get it right first time so I don't have to get into this whole correction thing, which wastes time and effort. A lesson learnt (I hope!).

 

Steven 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, Louie da fly said:

A lesson learnt (I hope!).

Many more to come, is my experience Steven. It does bear it's fruits though: I can't see a wobble

Carl

"Desperate affairs require desperate measures." Lord Nelson
Search and you might find a log ...

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

I've made the mast steps and put them in. Here they are dry fitted:

 

20180717_151601.thumb.jpg.2549a00d2c5cde4e13e488ded63d6c45.jpg

The supports for the frame to hold the lower bank of oars are now glued in place:

20180717_152134.thumb.jpg.c38f85d252d1ea1fa232ec3aa53123bf.jpg

And the frame has been glued to them.

20180717_181229.thumb.jpg.5dddadd72e8358cdf4537f7b186bef19.jpg  20180717_181239.thumb.jpg.de70283d5bc340fbcddf8d8c410cdcf5.jpg

Oops: I discovered that the pencilled guidelines I'd drawn to fix the angle of the oars faced 180 degrees the wrong way, so I had to erase them and redraw them. I still have a remnant of the wrong ones because I started with spirit pen at one end and couldn't get rid of it. As the pencil line around each oar where it goes through the oarport was getting faint I've also re-done the lines.  

 

And the mast steps are now glued in, along with the blocking pieces.

 

20180719_185115.thumb.jpg.d8b80d24c8a7389d27ef471a218e8633.jpg

 

Still working on the new masts and then I'll make the wedges to hold them in place. I also have to make and insert the mast partners to hold them rigidly.

 

Steven

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The hull is looking fantastic Steven; a testament to your search for accuracy and quality.

 

cheers

 

Pat

If at first you do not suceed, try, and then try again!
Current build: HMCSS Victoria (Scratch)

Next build: HMAS Vampire (3D printed resin, scratch 1:350)

Built:          Battle Station (Scratch) and HM Bark Endeavour 1768 (kit 1:64)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks everything for the likes.

 

Pat, thanks for the comment, though I'm afraid the frame to hold the oars is a modern fudge, as I'm not prepared to put in lower oar benches and oarsmen that will never be seen.

 

Steven

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've made the foremast.

 

I'd cut a piece of walnut with a tapered thickness with my drop saw, and I marked out the two masts and cut them roughly to shape with a coping saw. I trimmed the foremast with a Stanley knife (see picture) as close as I could to the lines I'd marked, and made the faces flat and straight with a file. I left the top rough to start with, because it was going to hold the "blob" containing the sheaves.

20180720_133848.thumb.jpg.466281e56adccbbda6fba83959e72539.jpg

Unfortunately I got it wrong with the after-mast. Somehow I'd missed the lines and the thing ended up with a bow in it.

20180720_133943.thumb.jpg.c023ada2bc33aea2e2a7bfc9ed87999a.jpg 

Fortunately I'd left myself enough wriggle room to straighten it out - barely enough. After it was straight I put it to one side and went on with the foremast.

 

I marked the correct taper for the other two faces of the foremast, and trimmed them so I had a square-section mast tapering from the base to the top, then filed it flat and straight. I cut faces at 45 degrees, to create an octagonal section. Then with the file I turned that into a round section, rotating the mast in my fingers to get the "feel" (which I've found gives a pretty reliable circular section when you don't have a lathe). Cut the "blob" to shape and cut the tenon at the lower end of the mast

 

20180720_220055.thumb.jpg.af0d4dfcddfc4f0bc1a3c22041e6d3e1.jpg   

 

and dry fitted it into the mast step,

 

20180720_220859.thumb.jpg.35e7a77dc73c3efdc1017a8beffde901.jpgadding a wedge to hold it tight against the blocking piece.

 

20180720_220815.thumb.jpg.6bd3b754d3fd4bdb8a39c6cecc25be5c.jpg

 

More to follow.

 

Steven

Edited by Louie da fly
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I promised a step by step outline of making a lower bench oar, so here it is. Two of the oars had turned out to be unsatisfactory - one was bowed and the other had a dark blemish in just the wrong place - so I had to replace them.

 

Here's the first oar blank with the outline on paper glued onto a piece of 2mm thick planetree wood.

 

20180721_180142.thumb.jpg.d82d0e784a5c3db0491e71cd446273f3.jpg

 

I trimmed it with a No. 11 scalpel till the wood was almost cut back to the outline - leaving a little overlap in case of Murphy. Then I cut faces at 45 degrees to give it an octagonal section and started trimming the thickness to make the oarblade.

 

20180721_191827.thumb.jpg.79e0ecb059880fd5af838cc0f84a4467.jpg   20180721_191905.thumb.jpg.6378830fea9916c7b8b84a812a82fccf.jpg

 

Comparing it with a "standard" oar - it's quite a bit too thick.

 

20180721_192520.thumb.jpg.48d3712b42f189e1bfb6347f8772977d.jpg

 

Trimmed down further to get the shape closer to the desired one. (Sorry, the new one's on the right this time).

 

20180721_193105.thumb.jpg.1216cb149b93bac8e73a87142c367326.jpg

 

More to follow.

 

Steven

  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Trimming down with the scalpel to get closer to the standard oar.

 

20180721_192520.thumb.jpg.3b10f21e95a20b83877b235510328058.jpg

 

And further still

 

20180721_193105.thumb.jpg.628ffab64bf3aabf1a969eb928fc01c5.jpg

 

Side view

20180721_193436.thumb.jpg.2bc7b4af619a3ca9b75fdd62c1d6ce82.jpg

Shaped the blade - using the file now, as I did on the mast, rotating the oar in my fingers to check for roundness and filing down any lumps and bumps.

20180721_193502.thumb.jpg.0645edd7671d885b95bbc58a98c973d7.jpg

Cleaned-up with the file and then sanded to finish. Note the pencil line near the base - this is to mark where the oar goes through the oarport.

20180721_194045.thumb.jpg.9c35a6359ae2838441ce53c6b55c6293.jpg

The finished oar side-on.

 

20180721_194212.thumb.jpg.695bacc61f81e453bde0be5cc8543ca1.jpg

 

Steven

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Oh no, these oars are only correct from the oarport outwards, Druxey. I've built a framework of my own invention to support the lower oars rather than have to make 50 lower deck oarsmen (who will be invisible anyway), and reduced and bodged the inboard section of the oars to go on the framework. See my post of 6 July above. Sorry if I gave the wrong impression!

 

Prof Pryor's reconstruction has the outboard length as 3.395 metres (including the blades) and the inboard as 1.265 metres (including the handles). Though I'm not following his reconstruction completely as I believe the Yenikapi finds have invalidated some of his conclusions, I have followed it in regard to oar lengths (well, the bits you can see, anyway).

 

Steven    

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Here's my theoretical midship section, to give some idea of the oars.

 

20180722_011929.thumb.jpg.eed8f294c6a8ed3aaa49bb60779d4990.jpg

 

Sorry, I wasn't holding the camera quite straight so it looks like the ship has developed a list.

 

It was very difficult getting enough headroom for the lower oarsmen while keeping the ship low enough in the water to allow a workable angle for the upper bank of oars - the deck beams are only the equivalent of 100mm (4") deep, which won't span from side to side of the ship without bowing, so there are a pair of beams running the length of the ship to support them, held up in their turn by a series of posts - positioned so a person can walk between them but allowing the oarsmen enough room to row.

 

None of this lower stuff appears on the model, but I had to work it out to my own satisfaction to see if it would work in the real world. Probably not the way they actually did it, but it is workable.

 

Steven

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The "blob" at the top of the mast that holds the sheaves for the halyard is a bit too small to match the one in the picture I based it on.

 

5b0ab1cc5903b_SaintNicolasOrphanosc1320Thessaloniki.jpg.053f687cb2a5a68e074476c8664cd942.jpg

 

So I'm making two new ones, one for each mast.

 

20180722_113143.thumb.jpg.85b3640510fe72e519ba1f48413733b9.jpg 20180722_113422.thumb.jpg.39f17389be54483cc13fedc3f02db28b.jpg

20180722_172645.thumb.jpg.59bb079918fee1bb15654dd9ca243774.jpg 20180722_172637.thumb.jpg.47cda50f0967f25e7ba32e468f923329.jpg

Also they'll have two sheaves instead of the single one in the original one I made, as the forces involved in hauling up the yard are pretty large.

20180723_171109.thumb.jpg.2fe404c49a4a1021c5109d86a17908c5.jpg  

The drill bit in the hole is to ensure the tenon for the blob is at the correct angle, as I don't have the luxury of a drill press to drill the hole exactly in line with the axis of the blob. Had I thought of it earlier, I could have used the drill bit as a guide in carving the blob itself and not have to adjust the tenon on the mast.

20180723_171255.thumb.jpg.14cf0e1cbd12203ccc6699311f8892df.jpg

I expect I'll have to re-drill the holes for the sheaves through the tenon once the blob is in place, so the halyard can pass through the sheaves.

 


Steven

Edited by Louie da fly
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Steven, what angle is the foremast from the vertical?

Dick

Current build: 

 Le Gros Ventre 1:48 POF   http://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/topic/564-le-gros-ventre-by-woodrat-scale-1-48-pof-1767-french-exploration-vessel/

 

Past builds:

Mycenaean War Galley by Woodrat - 1:48 - Shell first Plank on Frame:https://modelshipworld.com/topic/33384-mycenaean-war-galley-by-woodrat-148-shell-first-plank-on-frame

Venetian round ship 14th century by Woodrat fully framed - 1:40 scalCompleted

https://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/topic/17991-venetian-round-ship-14th-century-by-woodrat-fully-framed-140-scale

Venetian Carrack or Cocha 1/64 by woodrat   https://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/topic/4915-venetian-carrack-or-cocha-164-by-woodrat        completed

United States Frigate Essex 1:64 POF   http://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/topic/4496-usf-essex-by-woodrat-scale-1-64-fully-framed-from-takakjian-plans/ - completed 

Yenikapi12 by Woodrat - 1/16 scale - a small Byzantine merchant vessel of the 9th century

https://modelshipworld.com/topic/23815-yenikapi12-by-woodrat-116-scale-a-small-byzantine-merchant-vessel-of-the-9th-century-finished/

The Incredible Hulc by Woodrat - an experimental reconstruction of a mediaeval transport

https://modelshipworld.com/topic/25641-the-elusive-hulc-by-woodrat-finished-a-speculative-reconstruction-of-a-mediaeval-merchantman-132-plank-on-frame/

 

 

 

Location: Perth, Western Australia

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...