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HMS Victory by dafi - Heller - PLASTIC - To Victory and beyond ...


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Then at X-Mess, I kept up with this holey ship (got the pun? ;-)

 

After scuppering around with the scuppers I transfered the 1765 sceme onto my 1805 version.

 

800_victory-scuppers_7454.jpg

 

Just added the visible sceme to the last unsure positions and was able to fit the needed 8 ones each deck and side.

 

Here are the test holes  for the 6,5" at the manger, 5.5" scuppers of the lower deck and 3.5" of the upper ones, here in scale 1,5 mm 1,2 mm and 0,8 mm.

 

800_victory-scuppers_7455.jpg

 

In MSW druxey reminded me that all openings should not be on top of the seams. This explained my question about the double scupper in the manger area that usually have different heights.

 

And now come the holey ship: 54 holes including the two inlets on the bottom for the elm tree pump. First a little wellness programm including some acupuncture, then enlarging stepwise onto the 0,8 mm, 1,2 mm and 1,5 mm ...

 

800_Victory_Scuppers_7471.jpg

 

... sometimes placing wrong and so replacing and sealing the wrong holes with sprue ...

 

800_Victory_Scuppers_7474.jpg

 

... and always nicely avoiding the seams.

 

800_Victory_Scuppers_7476.jpg

 

That led me to replace the old eyebolts too that I positioned onto the seams and ...

 

... as by trying to get them out, already having nice tension on the tools, the bolt broke, the ship jumped to the side, the original thin Heller-stand gave way by splitting itself into two parts and  with lots of good luck I just caught the ship before it could continue its dive from the gallery to the living room situated some 3 meters below!

 

Take a small breath and to continue ...

 

800_Victory_Scuppers_7478.jpg

 

... all around ...

 

800_Victory_Scuppers_7479.jpg

 

... and thats what I researched for for more than 18 months ...

 

... but that was my own decision  ;-)

 

All the best, Daniel
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The missing carriges!

 

The old question: First painting still on the sprue or first assembling? I decided to do like Alexander cutting the Gordian knot:

 

First assembling and then painting on the sprue! Sounds easy? It is ;-)

 

800_victory-lafetten_7480.jpg

 

Flatend the ends of the axis ...

 

800_victory-lafetten_7482.jpg

 

... used felt to take the scraps away ...

 

800_victory-lafetten_7483.jpg

 

... and as my files were to big to take the paint off, I used a diamond miller in a drill handle  ...

 

800_victory-lafetten_7487.jpg

 

... and here they stand all proud waiting for a small white drybrush and their barrels :-)

 

800_victory-lafetten_7485.jpg

 

Daniel
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Meanwhile I sent my small worker for a small dress up ...

 

800_victory_19_7494.jpg

 

800_victory_19_7495.jpg

 

... and it looks like he had done some hard working lately :-)

 

And tried hard with the building of the stairs:

 

As it is difficult to measure inside of the ship, I took a masking tape to take measures, so one can easily get it right after taking it out :-)

 

800_victory_19_7489.jpg

 

Then glueing the treads onto tape ...

 

800_victory_19_7488.jpg

 

... to get all of them the right distance. Beside you can see V1 from the early beginning of the build.

 

800_victory_19_7491.jpg

 

Regrouped vertically for the milling of the groove of the middle rib..

 

800_victory_20_7501.jpg

 

Made some templates for the assembly  ...

 

800_victory_20_7504.jpg

 

... glued the treads ...

 

800_victory_20_7506.jpg

 

... and the middle rib.

 

800_victory_20_7508.jpg

 

And there he stands my small worker and shaking his head upon the wrong proportioned stairs and sends the carpenter back to work ...

 

800_victory_20_7511.jpg

 

At least, he tried to do his best ...

 

All the Best, dafi
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So I decided to go differently :-)

 

Status: Heller, V1 from the very start of the build and the V2 ...

 

800_victory_Leiter_7513.jpg

 

And here the planks of 0,5 mm x 2 mm that I prepared long time ago before I realised that the 6 maters mentioned at Mondfeld are far to small  ...

 

800_victory_Leiter_7515.jpg

 

... and on the right two tests for a right distance of steps: left 2 mm and right 2,5 mm, which looks right :-)

 

800_victory_Leiter_7516.jpg

 

And on the far right a first test with a new assembly technic :-)

 

800_victory_Leiter_7519.jpg

 

Looks right more soon.

 

Liebe Grüße, Daniel
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Usually I like to work without machinery, but that time I had to bring out the heavy material: the  Micromiller ...

 

800_victory_leitern_7520.jpg

 

Putting in a block of Ureol, with an prepared angle according to the stairs.Distance of the steps 2,5 mm, as seen in the test before. CAD indicates a step in depth of 1,9 mm. 

 

And here we go with a 0,6 er miller for the gauge of the 0,5 mm steps ...

 

800_victory_leitern_7521.jpg

 

... and a groove for helping the ejection, and I champfered the edges to avoid problems with increeping glue.

 

800_victory_leitern_7522.jpg

 

Then putting the steps in ...

 

800_victory_leitern_7523.jpg

 

... adjusting the sides, fixing with tape ...

 

800_victory_leitern_7525.jpg

 

... putting a stop for the bottom position of the lateral supprt, glueing ...

 

800_victory_leitern_7526.jpg

 

... and another nice shot for the family album :-)

 

800_victory_leitern_7528.jpg

 

And as it came out pretty enough even a close up ...

 

800_victory_leitern_7530.jpg

 

... on the target area ...

 

800_victory_leitern_7531.jpg

 

... and once lifelike :-)

 

800_victory_leitern_0082.jpg

 

Lieber Gruß, Daniel
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Still worked on the template and made the middle groove larger for that I also can work the smaller stairs, now making them is real easy fun :-)

 

800_victory_treppen_7533.jpg

 

I also was able to use the template for repairing: Cutting off a misglued step, putting the stair back into the template and fix a new step :-)

 

The only tricky thing is the groove in the middle of the large stairs.

 

Even well packed they like to bow up and then vibrate out of the vice.

So well placed ...

 

800_victory_treppen_7534.jpg

 

... and held down by dafis patended steps downholder.

 

800_victory_treppen_7535.jpg

 

And that´s the bounty of the last days ...

 

800_victory_treppen_7539.jpg

 

... cuties in every angle ;-)

 

800_victory_treppen_7540.jpg

 

So now you may call me MotS, Master of the Stairs ;-)

 

Daniel
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... and now something completely different :-)

 

The cannon balls I already presented quite a while ago, they came from here ...

 


 

... and the blackening stuff from here:

 


 

First one to take the grease off, second the blackening and the oil for dehydration ...

 

800_victory_balls_29_7594.jpg

 

... first the degreasing ...

 

800_victory_balls_25_7544.jpg

 

... used a magnet to take them out ...

 

800_victory_balls_25_7546.jpg

 

... well dried ...

 

800_victory_balls_25_7548.jpg

 

... and like Roger Rabbit back to the soup, the blue one for blackening ...

 

800_victory_balls_25_7549.jpg

 

... luckily used old china as the stains remained :-)

 

800_victory_balls_25_7550.jpg

 

First I wanted to avoid the dehydration oil because of the glueing, but some of the balls turned brown :-(

 

800_victory_balls_26_7551.jpg

 

So same procedure as every year James, back to degreasing - the rust come of the balls but not off the china ...

 

800_victory_balls_26_7552.jpg

 

... freshely blackned and oiled.

 

Putted UHU Universal into a old syringe and gave nice injections  ...

 

800_victory_balls_29_7585.jpg

 

... uand placed the bullets :-)

 

800_victory_balls_29_7586.jpg

 

Used lots of glue but still some came off, the oxide is a ideal separation agent ...

 

So then, good luck, Daniel
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... ok, what the hell is he doing now? 

 

800_victory_admire_29_7578.jpg

 

...aaaahhh ... transparent bits ...

 

800_victory_stand_27_7576.jpg

 

... oh tricky, putting the drill stand onto a box to extend height and swinging the drill to the backside ...

 

800_victory_0_7596.jpg

 

... clever-clever, but now?!? ... 

 

800_victory_admire_29_7579.jpg

 

... acupuncture for the keel?

 

800_victory_1_7601.jpg

 

... do not want to see that. 

 

800_victory_admire_29_7580.jpg

 

Now he is taking a cherry for drilling a 3 mm hole into the 4 mm false keel, clever like that the material won´t rip on the edges. But what for ???

 

800_victory_1_7603.jpg

 

AAAAAAAhhh, he is preparing a fairytale play: I remember the thing with the glass coffin ...

 

800_victory_admire_29_7581.jpg

 

... Snow-Viccy and the 7 dafis ;-)

 

800_victory_1_7606.jpg

 

So happy new year and always stay above the waterline :-)

 

800_victory_1_7605.jpg

 

Amicalement, Daniel
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Splendid stand Daniel! One might think that you are the brain behind the new Cutty Sark display....

Happy modelling!

Håkan

__________________________________________

 

Current build: Atlantica by Wintergreen

Previous builds

Kågen by Wintergreen

Regina by Wintergreen

Sea of Galilee boat, first century, sort of...

Billing Boats Wasa

Gallery:

Kågen (Cog, kaeg) by Wintergreen - 1:30Billing Boats Regina - 1:30Billing Boats Dana

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After the slipway I managed to do my second big holiday monster: the rope walk

 

800_victory-rope-walk_7688.jpg

 

... simple wooden box, some cogwheel from Fischertechnik out of my dark juvenile past, 4 mm aluminum wire bent to hooks...

 

800_victory-rope-walk_7684.jpg

 

... the movable counter part and the runner ...

 

800_victory-rope-walk_7687.jpg

 

... some screws as guides for a 2,5 meter curtain rail ...

 

800_victory-rope-walk_7686.jpg

 

... and getting a range of crochet thread from the grandma shop in the city.

 

800_victory-rope-walk_7689.jpg

 

And these are the results - the three brown ones (nr 2, 5 and 8 from the bottom) are the reference from Krick 0,3, 0,5 and 0,7 mm:

 

800_victory-rope-walk_7683.jpg

 

Holy impatience, they are not yet dyed but I could not resist putting them in place to see how they react and look in place ...

 

800_victory-rope-walk_7690.jpg

 

... and, does not look too bad :-)

 

800_victory-rope-walk_7691.jpg

 

800_victory-rope-walk_7694.jpg

 

The build was rather easy and simple. But now it will get tricky: Finding the right materials and the right way of using it concerning the right amount of twisting and tension.

 

cogwheel - old stuff

Curtain rail - old stuff

Wood - 1,58 Euro

Aluminum - 1,50 Euro 

Feeling - priceless ;-)

 

All the best, Daniel
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Mam, he is going to do something naughty again!!!

 

... and he already did it again ...

 

800_Victory_heads05_7716.jpg

 

What´s up now? In June 2010 he was all proud about then improved seats of ease ...

 

... but what did dafi, or better Heller think about the backside of John Bull???

 

800_Victory_heads03_7696.jpg

 

Two sailors on there? Even the bucket is bigger. And how should the able seaman aim at these little holes even if he is a seat? And what about the not able ones ;-)

Ok, carved new ones see the small but important increase of spacial capacity ...

 

800_Victory_heads05_7715.jpg

 

... and looks much better like this :-)

 

800_Victory_heads05_7723.jpg

 

And it is even enough for two backsides side by side without the danger of being trailed for sodomy ;-)

 

Victory-120106_7731.jpg

 

And in summer even with the shade of a cosy mariners walk.

 

Victory-120106_7736.jpg

 

All the best, Daniel
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Okokok...

 

Back to business. Did you already discover the other small detail? The netting? Ever since I bought it 18 month ago I was wondering how to fix it in a decent way. Quite rigid but still floppy, bad to paint, difficult to handle, in on word: a modellers dream ;-)

 

But now I think I found my way. Taking the measures with templates ...

 

800_Victory_heads04_7697.jpg

 

... transfer to cardboard ...

 

800_Victory_heads04_7698.jpg

 

... glueing the tulle over it, making a frame out of 0,3 mm copper wire and fix it with CA.

 

800_Victory_heads05_7699.jpg

 

Taking my Citadel paints and give it a nice coat, this enhances the appearance  of the material, three layers of different colors give a little bit of shading ...

 

800_Victory_heads05_7704.jpg

 

... cut out ...

 

800_Victory_heads05_7712.jpg

 

... and holy s... I changed the running direction of the material and got different looks :-(

 

800_Victory_heads05_7722.jpg

 

Ok, made new ones and sewed them on the proper way ...

 

Victory-120106_7729.jpg

 

... and it looks much better :-)

 

By pulling a little bit on the right corners of the copper wire it also got slightly wavy to be not too even.

 

Victory-120106_7730.jpg

 

So bye for now, Daniel
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Some small thoughts ...

 

 

... with 800 men crew and 6 seats we get this optimized calculation: 
 
800 men (NCO) / 6 seats gives 133 men/seat 
 
In a optimized 24 hours use using all seats we get the following numbers: 
 
24 hours = 1440 minutes 
 
1440 minutes / 133 men = 10,5 minutes/man per day. This means no second wasted and the next user always stand by. 
 
If you take account of that not the whole day it is possible to have this steady usage because of time, scedules and weather, the usage time per person sinks dramatically. If I remember well, constipation was widely spread, which leads to longer men mean residence time. 
 
So the conclusion is, that the heads, regarding the weather, daytime and service schedule, could possibly be a quite crowded place at certain moments. 
 
This account only includes the "big business". There still would be some persons too to be expected at the heads for the "small business", if they are not preferring hanging out in the shrouds (leewards): One hand for the ship and one hand for yourself - now that line is finally understood. 
 
A quick research in German Law and regulations indicates the following: 
 
Puplic Law of the State of lower Saxony says for a leisure event of 800 visitors the calculation should be: 
800:100 x 0,8 = 7 seated toilets and 800:100 x 1,2 = 10 urinals (always rounded) 
 
The Law of Working Spaces "Arbeitsstätten-Richtlinie, ArbStätt 5.037.1, vom 26. Juni 1976 (ArbSch. 9/1976 S. 322)" 
for 250 employes one needs 10 seated toilets and 10 urinals, that means more than double for 800 employees. 
 
In a converse argument that leads to the conclusion: 
For a working place the ship should have 5 times more seated toilets and this leads to - that by the number of seats - the ship must be a leisure event - Join the Navy - see the better world! 
 
Sehr geehrter Gruß, Ihr treuergebener Diener
most sincerely, your humble servant,
 
dafi
Edited by dafi
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Application form for the funny farm

 

Dear audience,

 
to get myself faster into the mental home, I decided to fill out the necessary application forms.
 
As usual, I started by getting out the heavy material ...
 
800_victory-tiller1_7781.jpg
 
... but it just started with some minor discomforts ...
 
800_victory-tiller1_7759.jpg
 
... and I originally just wanted to exchange the dark brown tiller as it proved a little bit to short. The one on the left had the right length but when I wanted to prepare the fittings I realised ...
 
800_victory-tiller1_7773.jpg
 
... that the original had a completely different shape with the thickest part just in front of the rudder. So the fittings were fixed fast, the hoop near the rudder with the two fixing rods ...
 
800_victory-tiller1_7768.jpg
 
... the bolts for the tension tackle, and the double pair in the front for guiding the rope: But now it got funny ...
 
800_victory-tiller1_7778.jpg
 
... making blocks fitting to tiller with its 2 mm x 2 mm cross section. The drill has 0,5 mm and the new blocks out of Ureol have about 1,9 mm x 1,2 mm x 0,9 mm. For not having to look for them or even loosing them I left them stored on the drill :-)
 
First rigging tests proved unsuccessfull, wrong cord, too thin and fuzzy. Also the blocks were on the wrong place. 
 
800_victory-tiller1_7775.jpg
 
Ok, ripped it down and thought ...
 
And thought.
 
And thought.
 
And thought.
 
The conclusion: The length of the steering wheel´s drum shows the size of the rigging line. The original shows 7 turns of the rope which gives the half length of the drum and leaving a quarter of it free in the front and also in the back. This results in about 15 possible turns on a drum of about 45 cm which leads to a size of the rope of about 3 cm, respectively 0,3 mm on the model. Great, got some of that thickness in sufficient quality left :-)
 
800_victory-tiller1_7779.jpg
 
Rerigged the blocks - of course with the powersplice - and it looks much friendlier :-)
 
800_victory-tiller1_7782.jpg
 
800_victory-tiller1_7796.jpg
 
Still added - not glued yet - the goos neck for the sweep ...
 
800_victory-tiller1_7798.jpg
 
... and I do believe that I have everything needed for the successful application form :-)
 
Greetings from hell´s kitchen, Daniel
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With the application form successful turned in, I was allowed to the qualifying examination to prove my insanity´s potential.

 

I found an adequate project, the tiller sweep that supports the front end of the tiller and gives guidance for the tiller rope.

 

First taking the measures - the moving angle of the tiller including the sheaves on the sides ...

 

800_victory-sweep1_7801.jpg

 

... and it even fits, hihihihihi...

 

The circular bits for the top and bottom were easily cut but how to do the middle part? ...

 

... thought ...

 

... thought ...

 

- twice enough this time – and I knew how to build up the inside- the easy way ;-)

 

Took one of the remaining 0,7 mm planks, cut it to a width of 1 mm plus and squeezed it vertically inbetween two 1 mm styrene sheets ...

 

800_victory-sweep1_7799.jpg

 

... and sanded the excess away ...

 

800_victory-sweep1_7800.jpg

 

... and glued it together as a sandwich. Gives a surprisingly sturdy piece of sweep, even though the faible materials.

 

Glued a small handle on it and test placed it ... 

 

800_victory-sweep1_7802.jpg

 

... and it looked very promising ...

 

... thought ...

 

... thought ...

 

... how do I fix this bit down there deep in the bowels of my Vic in some way, that it finds itself in the right place? And underneath the deck beam?

 

... thought ...

 

... and carved two guides for the deck beam into the top side of the sweep. Now the longitudinal direction was fixed ☺

 

800_victory-sweep1_7809.jpg

 

For that the tiller rope does not wear too much, there were rollers in the front groove ...

 

800_victory-sweep1_7814.jpg

 

... some more tests for the positioning ... 

 

800_victory-sweep1_7815.jpg

 

... and again the old question: how to get it fixed down there?

 

... thought ...

 

... and again an easy solution: Two pieces of soft foam push gently from the bottom and allow precise fixing☺ The hairclips just help the positioning. Some drops of CA and here we are :-)

 

800_victory-sweep1_7816.jpg

 

Still had to glue the goose neck on place protruding into the back groove and the tiller even sweeps the way it should do in the sweep.

 

800_victory-sweep1_7819.jpg

 

800_victory-sweep1_7821.jpg

 

So the qualification test was going very promising and I hope I was able to show a glimpse of a model makers insanity potential.

 

Sincerely yours, etc., etc. Daniel
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Hurrrray! After successful application and having passed the qualification test I was admitted for the final and terminal examination!!!

 

So: Stacking spheres was in the past.

 

The attentive follower might have realised that the sheaves at the sides of the sweep are still missing.

 

They were easily carved out off some 2 mm x 2 mm square-shaped timber, strenghened with some CA and drilled twice . But how to fix them underneath the beam beside the sweep?

 

This time just a short ...

 

... thought ...

 

... and fixed a handle out of wire ...

 

800_victory-rope_7827.jpg

 

... and placed it with some CA on place.

 

800_victory-rope_7829.jpg

 

But that was just the warm up. How the hell to get the tiller rope through this now hidden sheave???

 

And another time ...

 

... thought ...

 

... thought ...

 

... and used the threading help from my wife´s sewing kit by pushing it from front through the inner hole of the sheave to pull a helping line from the back to the front to pull the tiller rope from the front to the back. Sounds complicated, it is not ;-)

 

800_victory-rope_7830.jpg

 

 Then pushed the threading help from the front through the outer hole to pull the tiller rope from the back back to the front. Sounds easier? It is :-)

 

Then constructed the further guidance of the rope with the cross members in the center line of the ship. Looks sexy ☺

 

800_victory-rope_7837.jpg

 

The rope is then led upwards through next deck´s gratings to the wheel.

 

800_victory-rope_7847.jpg

 

And as the 1:100 original model steering wheel is to fiddly for some real life´s turning, I constructed a substitute one. The drum diameter is about the right size. As the tensioning tackles on the tiller are fixed for some reasons, I had to adjust the tension in the system by two wedges underneath the barrel, this giving the great hight of the construction.

 

Victory-120113_7858.jpg

 

The construction now follows exactly the original so the following should happen:

If those dafinistic fingers seen on the picture turn the barrel ...

 

800_victory-rope_7846.jpg

 

... the tiller and the rudder move magically :-) :-) :-)

 

800_victory-rope_7845.jpg

 

800_victory-rope_7844.jpg

 

800_victory-rope_7843.jpg

 

....hihihihihihi...

 

 

I hope that with this I passed my happy home examination ;-)

 

I also hope you enjoyed this excursus to a 18th century steering system as much as I did. Learned a lot regarding the technic used in those days as much as learned some nice new tricks for model making. ☺

 

With all the best wishes from this nice bin with the upholstered walls, oh what nice colors I can see after those funny pills ,

 

always yours,  Daniel

 

 

Disclaimer/Remark 1: 

NO! The steering wheel underneath the poop will not be movable! After fixing the next deck, tiller and rudder will be fixed for security reasons. I do not need an "unshipping of the rudder" on the finished model. But until then I will enjoy the view :-)

Disclaimer/Remark 2: 

I already waiting for people trying to copy the substitute rudder believing it was an original fitting ...

Disclaimer/Remark 3:

But who knows - one of the first hits of the french round shots was the steering wheel and who knows how the orinal substitute looked like ...

 

 

Ah, here they come, the men with the white coats, they are coming to take me away ...

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Lee discribes on page 24 the use of additional crosstrees for tops of large ships. The timeframe is just the great repair and the Vic could be considered a "large ship", so seen by Lee this version could be qualified ;-)

 

Aapproved by the admiralty from 1802 to 1815, these tops were made out of two pieces for easier replacement, these tops needed further strenghening by upper crosstrees/sleepers. This led too to a different layout for the battens. 

 

I already found some pictures of top of todays Victory mast tops, they all are done the "Heller way" :-)

 

Neither Marquard or Schrage show this arrangement. But I found in Goodwins HMS Victory: her construction, career and restauration, he writes on page 21 that during the great repair of 1800 to 1803 the Vic was fitted with fighting tops "in two halves to make repair easier". This should be this version Lee talks about :-)

 

And I found some sleepers on USS Constitutions 1930´s tops.


 

As pictures better show than long explanations can do, I made a fast model compared with the classical version.

 

800_Victory_tops_8063.jpg

 

One can see the extra cross trees on the top side and the different layout of the battens. Just Lees drawing does not show all the details, also it does not correspond with the small cross section he is showing underneath the drawing.

 

800_Victory_tops_8064.jpg

 

800_Victory_tops_8065.jpg

 

800_Victory_tops_8068.jpg

 

Here are the details that I am trying to find out:

 

Is the back of the gunwhale open as the classical one is? How is the shape of the span piece? 

 

800_Victory_tops_8066.jpg

 

800_Victory_tops_8067.jpg

 

The battens are shown in the longitudinal section with no decreased height towards the center. As the battens that point towars the lumber hole have no second barrier, I decided to diminish the height as it is in the classical one. How is the form of the front span piece? Are there filling pieces underneath, is ther a slot like in the back or does the span piece go bdown to the rim?

 

800_Victory_tops_8069.jpg

 

Also, do the upper crosspieces diminish height towards the outside as the lower ones do?

 

Then came version two:

Half of my questions were answered by Lee two pages later in the 1815 version of the tops, just he names them now Sleepers instead of upper crosstrees ...

 

How should I know that ...

 

So there is stated, that the sleepers have the same form as the lower crosstrees, just halve of the height. So three suggestions of mine have been proven: Same form as the lower cross trees with chamfering towards the outside, too thick in my version '#1 and the span pieces go down to the rim - 3 hits, not bad for the ego ;-) 

 

Ok, back to the machinery, slimming down the sleepers, giving them the chamfer towards the outside ...

 

800_Victory-top_8074.jpg

 

... rounded off the edges, cleaned up a bit, and it looks much more harmonic and so we get a little dance from ...

 

800_Victory-top_8079.jpg 

 

... our beloved dancing sailor :-)

 

Lieber Gruß, Daniel
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After that much research I needed something easy to relax ...

 

On the left Hellers version of the rudderwheel, right dafis version, just enjoy, no further explanations :-)

 

800_Victory-wheel_8073.jpg

 

800_Victory-wheel_8077.jpg

 

800_Victory_wheel_8123.jpg

 

800_Victory_wheel_8128.jpg

      

800_Victory_wheel_8133.jpg

 

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Gute Nacht, Daniel
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Even me, even I do stupid things ...

 

Victory-120311_crap_8199.jpg

 

... uneven groud, color first too thin - than too thick - then too thin, wrong brush, uneven application, airbubbles and especially too late night and hurry to go to bed ...

 

... bad mixture ...

 

... okokok, as a punishment and not as an excercise sanding lesson ...

 

Victory-120317_crap_8211.jpg

 

...

 

...

 

but next session a little bit more competent and concentrated  ...

 

... after fixing the buff, also the new top got its paint ...

 

800_Victory_tops_8200.jpg

 

... you can see nicely the slots underneath the gunwhale.

 

800_Victory_tops_8202.jpg

 

As a result of the freshly introduced quality management our little a able-bodied seaman checks the fitting of the rail ...

 

800_Victory_tops_8201.jpg

 

... fixes the netting as demanded by the trade unions and insures himself about the stability of the planks of the platform..

 

800_Victory_tops_8216.jpg

 

Then came my usual drybrush and incing session, looks rather strong in the macro, but with the final viewing distance of min 40 cm it looks fine, especially to articulate the details with all the rigging still to come.

 

800_Victory_tops_8219.jpg

 

800_Victory_tops_8220.jpg

 

800_Victory_tops_8229.jpg

 

800_Victory_tops_8221.jpg

 

800_Victory_tops_8223.jpg

 

800_Victory_tops_8226.jpg

 

Soo dafi looking rather happy now again :-)

 

Lieber Gruß, Daniel
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As usual it started with making a small pile of rubbish ...

 

800_victory-mizzen_8233.jpg

 

... than marking the positions for the new mast hoops on the now naked masts, fixing the start and bending round with some hair clamps.

 

800_victory-mizzen_8234.jpg.

 

Small quizz: whats that:

 

800_victory-mizzen_8235.jpg

 

Gettit?

 

800_victory-mizzen_8236.jpg

 

The supports of the boom´s saddle.

 

800_victory-mizzen_8237.jpg

 

Also renewed the ring for the belay pins and brought it into a horizontal orientation and checked the height with the old trial poop deck.

 

Refined the edges and corners of the cheecks, hounds and fishes ...

 

800_victory-mizzen_8242.jpg

 

...painted, inked and highlighted as usual, and the mizzen mast was done, here compared to the fore.

 

800_victory-mizzen_8397.jpg

 

One can nicely see the more ladylike proportions, the different angle of the testle trees, the missing rubbing fish in the front and the missing of tapering and rubbing battens on the all new top.

 

800_victory-mizzen_8412.jpg

 

800_victory-mizzen_8413.jpg

 

And also this joke I could not resist: Usually the masthoops were painted black as a standard. Nelson gave order to repaint them in buff according the rest of the masts for recognition reasons. But as the painters were lazy - or better said economical - the hoops underneath the quarterdeck stayed black :-)

800_victory-mizzen_8401.jpg

 

But stop, something elementary was missing, the belay pins ...

 

Okok, making some new ones in 1:100 ...

 

800_victory-mizzen_8403.jpg

 

... some wire, put in a stand, some white glue to form a drop on the top and some paint spilt over it. All exactly 4 mm long, just standing a little bit messy in the stand.

 

800_victory-mizzen_8406.jpg

 

Things got stuck together - pins with rail and pins-rail-mast together with trial poop deck ...

 

800_victory-mizzen_8422.jpg

 

... it goes deep down ...

 

800_victory-mizzen_8415.jpg

 

... and much up :-)

 

800_victory-mizzen_8424.jpg

 

All the best, Daniel
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I was looking at the pictures above. They looked great, but something was disturbing. I was looking at the pictures in of the V. in P. ...

 

... they looked the same. 

 

...

 

... until I asked myself, why do I display steel masts?!?

What makes the visible difference in this scale in between a painted steel and painted wooden masts? The wooden ones are made up of four parts around a core, showing the splitlines :-)

 

Ok, operation on the open heart, means on the finished painted mizzen mast ...

 

800_Victory-mizzen2_8431.jpg

 

... carving the split lines, restoring the paint and the inking and retaking the pictures :-)

 

800_Victory-mizzen2_8436.jpg

 

800_Victory-mizzen2_8443.jpg

 

Much more what my heart desired!

 

So this was the open heart surgery, soon there will be the brain surgery on the fore mast with the top already fixed, that will be fun too ;-)

 

And by the way, Dave at MSW realised, that I fixed the boom the wrong side up on the saddle ...

... already fixed too.

 

All the best, Daniel

 

800_Victory-mizzen2_8435.jpg
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Nothing exaggeratingly new, business as usual ...

 

... main mast done, together with the oob-version ...

 

800_victory_main_8468.jpg

 

800_victory_main_8465.jpg

 

800_victory_main_8467.jpg

 

800_victory_main_8466.jpg

 

... and the mizzen got his split lines.

 

800_victory_main_8487.jpg

 

Happy rest-eastern, Daniel
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Holy impatience ...

 

... still not happy with the self made lines ...

 

... the thick ones no problem, the thin ones are a drag ...

 

... but big want to continue. The best result was a 0,3 mm Krick-line, that I unraveled and laid from new :-)

 

But first came sorting the rings ...

 

Victory-120311-gun_8209.jpg

 

... by size and form, served hot on tape ...

 

Victory-120314-gun_8210.jpg

 

... and fixed on the lower deck guns. Then came the lead aprons for the gun locks ...

 

Victory-120419-gun_8534.jpg

 

... the line for the tompions and some turns around the muzzle.

 

Victory-120419-gun_8538.jpg

 

As I had to preassemble the gun outside, the task was that all the lengths for the rig are different due to the tumbledome and the different breadth of the deck.

 

First fixing a template ...

 

Victory-120311-gun_8205.jpg

 

... and it fits :-)

 

Victory-120419-gun_8539.jpg

 

Now some bondage - I like making some guns happy ;-)

 

First the breechline around the bum, fixing with CA ...

 

Victory-120419-gun_8540.jpg

 

... knotted in the front, the groove on the side helps as a guide for the height ...

 

Victory-120419-gun_8544.jpg

 

... and two wedges to make it tight. Then flooded the breechline with CA and phase 1 done :-)

 

Phase 2 some more bondage, a shortened needle is a good help ...

 

Victory-120419-gun_8545.jpg

 

... and well bound and done too.

 

Victory-120419-gun_8548.jpg

 

Then still fixed a gauge for the upper lashing ...

 

Victory-120419-gun_8551.jpg

 

... some CA-flooding and phase 3 done too :-)

 

After freeing the whole thing it stands nicely there ...

 

Victory-120419-gun_8555.jpg

 

... held to its final place and shortened the over lenghts. Fixed some rings as they might be seen by the open gunports.

 

Victory-120419-gun_8556.jpg

 

Victory-120419-gun_8557.jpg

 

And finalemente the whole in place. That is what I was looking for.

 

Victory-120419-gun_8560.jpg

 

Small check from the outside:

 

Victory-120419-gun_8564.jpg

 

The side takles will still be set, but this will be the next story :-)

 

Lieber Gruß, Daniel
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And some more basic work. To do the side takles I need small blocks. The smallest commercially available are the 2 mm from JB, great stuff but still a little bit to big for ma taste. So I wanted to see what there is still possible :-)

 

Literature shows several ways of doing blocks, most of them done in a similar way, so I am following that, just have to take out most of the machinery because of the size.

 

First I prepared a batten of 1,5 mm high and 1 mm thick, and marked it all 2 mm which gave the basic size of these ambitious project ...

 

800_victory-pullies_8571.jpg

 

... each of these marks got a diagonal cut in one direction and after all done, the batten was turned and the other side cut, so the grooves on one side were finished. Repeated on all four sides ...

 

800_victory-pullies_8572.jpg

 

... and this was achieved rather fast, some matt varnish to strengthen the edges ...

 

800_victory-pullies_8573.jpg

 

... and first drilling tests ...

 

800_victory-pullies_8570.jpg

 

... with the 0,5er drill. Result, difficult to get the right place, so more testing until it looked like in a swiss cheese factory ...

 

800_victory-pullies_8574.jpg

 

... and finally the enlightenment: drill fixed in the stand, a stop in 0,5 mm distance is fixed. The stop has the width of 2 mm which facilitates positioning. 

Now hold the batten tight and near at both sides and slide it up the stop until drilled ...

 

800_victory-pullies_8575.jpg

 

... move down and turn the batten 180° around the longitudinal axis, slide up and drill the second hole :-) 

(I spared you the fingers on the picture :-)

 

Looks already ok, the four blocks left of my little worker are the single blocks of 1 mm x 1 mm x 2 mm - hihihihihi - ... 

 

800_victory-pullies_8579.jpg

 

... a second coat of varnish, the cutter makes the groove on the side for the line - the most difficult part on the whole action - some sanding off of the edges, some more varnish and done. They stay on the batten and will be cut just prior to production for not getting lost - just in time production  :-)

 

800_victory-pullies_8580.jpg

 

Just a family picture: the Krick 3 mm, the JB 2 mm and Microline from dafi, and as it looks nice a macro shot.

 

800_victory-pullies_8583.jpg

 

So I already see the crowd out there laughing in anticipation of the knots in dafis fingers, while trying to tying some rigging onto these littel bits ...

 

Stay tuned, Daniel
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And now to something completely different - the strops ...

 

First threading test ...

 

800_victory-tackle_8727.jpg

 

... first had to squeeze the tip of my threading help to a smaller diameter, then pulled gently with brutal force this thickish 0,3 line through ...

 

800_victory-tackle_8728.jpg

 

... and test step N° 1 completed :-)

 

More difficult is the stropping as I remember from the tiller, so taking the line out again for security reasons as some glueing will be required ...

 

800_victory-tackle_8729.jpg

 

... fix the stropping line with one drop of CA in the groove on one side, carry once around the block, fix the extra strop for the hook, prepare the loop of thin line for securing the ensemble, fix it with Uhu Plast, - good fix but can be reopened if necessary - position the knots and ends properly, fix for good with CA, and once more I do a good cut :-)

 

And then with good hope and high expectations back to the scene of crime ... 

 

800_victory-tackle_8732.jpg

 

... and not tooo bad - and there are really two separate holes in the 1,5 mm block :-)

 

800_victory-tackle_8737.jpg

 

Okokok, the back hook still is too long, the line a packet string and the splices worth 24 with the cat´o´24-tails ...

 

... but the direction is right :-)

 

Disclaimer 1: This was a test, I wont do thaaaaaat for the lower deck guns ;-)

Disclaimer 2: I took a barrel with a sinking mark to remind you of the provenience of this model ...

 

;-)

 

Lieber Gruß, Daniel

Edited by dafi
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Come on baby...don't fear the Reeper

 

...

 

Let´s go back to the glorious days, when a little dafi was all proud reporting about his own-build Reeperbahn (ropewalk) ...

 

Victory-120103_ppp_7688.jpg

 

... showing happily his first ropes ...

 

Victory-120107_ppp_7743.jpg

 

... and all the crochet threads he bought in the neighbourhood and the world-wide-web  ...

 

Victory-120507_ppp_9251.jpg

 

... and how he rope-walked and walked the rope ...

 

Victory-120430_ppp_9177.jpg

 

... changed his place into a painters place ...

 

Victory-120322_ppp_8231.jpg

 

... and did many-many-many test to find the one and only right and trueful color for his new ropes ...

 

Victory-120322_ppp_8232.jpg

 

... until he questioned: 

 

What am I doing here?

 

As nicely to be seen ...

 

... everything much to thick for his purpose ...  :-(

 

And the colors? Did not work either ... the pure stain wrong colors, mixing did not work ... the black was too blueish, mixing with dark brown resulted in blueish blackish ropes with a brown core as the brown penetrated and the black resided just on the surface ... other paints and inks were not so successful either ...

 

Victory-120125_ppp_7923.jpg

 

... and also the ropes were too uneven, the start always tighter done than the end, as can be seen, the middle line is the start and the one underneath is the same rope, just the end ...

 

... ok, think it over ...

 

... and especially ...

 

Don´t fear the Reeper
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Come on baby...don't fear the Reeper

Baby feel the thread...don't fear the Reeper

 

If one is stuck one should do what should have been done in the start - Listen to your inner voice and listen to the others :-)

 

Not: "I-wanna-have-a-ropewalk-and-do-same-nice-ropes-as-seen-on-the-modelling-exhibition" but "I-need-great-ropes-for-my-Vic" :-)

 

That changes a lot as I am building a completely different scale. Changes a lot towards the materials and the usage of the walk. So freshly focussed back to work:

 

First listen to the others:  Oli/Modellbaumechaniker and Holger/Pollux from my german forums gave me the right hints for the right materials. Fil au chinois and flyfishing lines were the right hints!



 

And this is what came:

The bigger bobbins are the fil au chinois, numbers for the colors see the picture

The smaller bobbin sare from the flyfishing, Uni-Thread green 8/0 the thin one, orange 6/0 the middle one, the thick 3/0 and the superthin 17/0

 

800_victory_reeper_9155.jpg

Victory-120509_rope_9277.jpg

 

The fil au chinois is cotton with very little fussy bits, the Uni is free of fuzz :-)

The Uni has a large range of colors avaliable, unfortunately not all colors in all sizes. The 8/0 and 6/0 are great for my purpose, the 3/0 has the great appearence of colored dental floss and the 17/0 is also quite uneven and transparent.

 

First tests proved to be the right direction sizewise :-)

 

Left the fuzzy thread from the supermarket, my thinnest possibility before this date. Then comes the fil au chinois, the Uni 8/0 and the Uni17/0, always the original strand, then two, 3 and 6 stranded with blocks of 3 mm, 2 mm and 1,5 mm for comparison.

 

Victory-120430_rope_9162.jpg

 

And the first test also showed that turning the axis by hand is a tad tiring and the cordless screwdriver is a little bit unhandy and also too insensitive ...

 

...

 

So ...


... reopening the Fischertechnik box from my youth, getting the motors out, glueing them with double sided tape onto the machinery, here the pretwisting side to be seen ... 

 

Victory-120506_rope_9221.jpg

 

... and the laying side ...

 

Victory-120506_rope_9222.jpg

 

... the motor can be turned sideways to reposition the hooks ...

 

Victory-120506_rope_9223.jpg

 

... and felt was put untderneath for easy gliding, and a steel ruler in the middle to control the movements of the sliding parts :-)

 

Both sides were clampedto the rail to be able to put the yarn properly. After chasing behind the bobbin for several times, a holder like the sewing machines ones was introduced, and from there the the yarn was brought to the hooks of the pretwisting side - I am showing a 6-stranded rope - ...

 

Victory-120506_rope_9224.jpg

 

... and after 3 times twice forth and back ... 

 

Victory-120506_rope_9228.jpg

 

... the yarn was fixed on the laying side.

 

Victory-120506_rope_9230.jpg 

 

The steel ruler shows the movement of the slide - I use 10% on this rope - loosen the clamp on the laying side, the pretwisting hooks start turning and the opposite slide starts moving miraculously towards the predrilling slide :-)

 

Victory-120506_rope_9232.jpg 

 

If the required distance is achieved, I clamp both sides onto the rail, and the three strands are laid until the required tension is achieved ...

 

Victory-120506_rope_9233.jpg

 

... some CA for fixing ...

 

Victory-120506_rope_9237.jpg

 

...going with the fingernails over to release unwanted tension ...

 

Victory-120506_rope_9238.jpg 

 

... and you can make a clean cut :-)

 

 

Lessons learned


You can see two things:

 

First: I am not using any more the little guide block :-)

No difference to be seen apart from that it is much more even ;-)

 

Secondly: I am fixing both sides while laying the rope! In the first trials I had the trouble, that the start of the rope was coming out nicely tight and the second half was much more loose ...

I realised that at the start of laying the pretwisting slide does not move, and the shortening of the rope is only compensated by the lateral spreading of the yarn. Just later on the slide starts moving. But it was not just after I forgot once to remove the clamp of this slide and got out a great and even clean cable that I realised, that the loosness of the rope came from the missing tension on the other side.

 

The next tests without the guide and fixed slides prooved to be successful :-) Just if the motor is having to work too hard, I stop it and I loosen the tension a tad by carefully moving the slide and then contimue.

 


Come on baby...don't fear the Reeper

Baby feel the thread...don't fear the Reeper

 

... and the part that should be pronounced is: feel the thread :-)

 

XXXDAn
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Baby feel the thread...don't fear the Reeper

 


... and now we are going through the thick ;-)

 

Some of the samples that came out:


Here are the different raw materials that were used from right to left:

 

No 20 crochet thread - the thinnest from the wool shop -, a 0,4 mm metal thread for comparison, the fuzzy yarn from the supermarket, the 3/0 Uni, the 6/0 Uni, das 8/0 Uni, the 17/0 uni and the fil au chinois. 

Victory-120509_rope_9289.jpg

 

Here the macros from the tests (the laid ropes were done in an early stage, so they are still quite uneven), the numbers indicate the number of strands. 

Supermarkets´yarn

Victory-120509_rope_9320.jpg

Fil au chinois

Victory-120509_rope_9321.jpg

8/0er Uni

Victory-120509_rope_9322.jpg

 

After I found no color scale in the shop, I ordered all colors that were not unsuitable for sure. So I used the surplus colors for the tests, here the Rusty Brown:

The great result is, that I can do everything I need with the Uni 8/0  :-) :-) :-)

 

Victory-120509_rope_9325.jpg

 

And again the numbers indicate the number of single strands. The AOTS of the Vic shows a nice tablature about all the ropes and their required sizes. And once again I see, that we often take too thick lines for the rigging ...

 

The lower shrouds should be a 30, the ratlines the pure yarn!!!  

 

Twists and turns

 

Apart from the 2 and 3 stranded rope it is possible to make Z and S laid ropes as required :-) Those two ones mentioned have first to be untwisted, which results in a more uneven rope. But as they are so thin that it is impossible to be seen in a model of that scale, there is always a possibility of cheating ;-) :-)

 

Colors


One of the reasons to do my own rope was to be able to choose the color. The available once for the standing rigging are too black, the one for the running rigging to colorful. Research in the reenactment-scene shows faded grey ropes: http://europe-today.ru/2012/03/stroitelstvo-kak-1200-let-nazad/.

 

I choose the color Tan, as it is avaliable in 8/0 and 6/0 and I will help perhaps with a little bit of ink once it is installed.

 

For the black I found a nice solution: I mix colors while laying :-)

Black with dark brown gives exactely the shade I found on old tarred ropes :-) 

 

Victory-120509_rope_9337.jpg

 

The color can be nicely adjusted by the quantities of the colors within the mixing. Also you can nicely see the different hands on the picture.

As for the running rigging I will possibly also mix in some strands of a less colorful yarn. 

 

Laying cables


And then the hour of truth: Using the self made ropes to make cables for anchor and shrouds:

 

Victory-120509_rope_9260.jpg

 

Looks promising ;-)

 

Baby feel the thread...don't fear the Reeper

 

 

The best is, the production now goes so easily and uncomplicatedly that I will not prepare to much rope in advance and will lay it as "just in time production" in the needed quantity and thickness while rigging :-)

 

So the first production for the lower deck is done ...

 

Victory-120509_rope_9353.jpg

 

... and please tune in again when we come to the next line of the famous song ...

 

Come on baby...don't fear the Reeper

Baby feel the thread...don't fear the Reeper

We'll be able to tie...don't fear the Reeper


 

Alles Gute, Daniel
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