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Everything posted by Chuck Seiler
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Greetings, and welcome, from Southern California.
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The strakes or the planks in the strakes? Are you basing that on the above picture and other representations or of the wreck? I don't think the planks are small, I think the people are too big. The planking pattern on the above picture, and other representations I have seen, is similar to the Wunterhund model. I think they LOOK short because they are wide. The above station master is 5 scale feet (5 feet 1 inch). The plank 3 strakes above him is 14.5 feet long and about 2 feet wide. I believe the representations show the cog as they see it, but the people are much larger...artistic license. Whadya think?
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Chris, I am working on my inner planking. I currently have the picture of the Roland von Bremen on my desktop as inspiration. As I am installing the inner planks I am noticing things on the RvB. Shouldn't the model have cap rails? Nowhere in my instructions do I see cap rails.
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CRI, In my humble opinion, your pictures and log look great with or without spaces. PLEASE don't stop posting.
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I can see what CRI is talking about. The pictures are butted up against each other top to bottom. If he had not mentioned it, I would not have noticed. I just looked at a couple other logs...some have spaces some do not. I am using Firefox. Try to manually put a space between pictures...see how that works. Beautiful build, by the way.
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Since the model seems to be somewhat based on the Bremen Cog wreck, I'm thinking they did SOME research. Maybe not. Having driven a 12 foot sailboat and a 4000 ton destroyer, I find it hard to believe they would lock their rudder in place and good exactly the way they wanted to go without any minor adjustments. I can't do that in my car.
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Progress continues. After seeing Chris' progress pics, I am embarrassed to post. Frames extensions on the round end. Less than great. Fortunately this will be covered by the stern castle. Hey, get the carpenter over here to trim that frame end!!! Progress on the pointy end. Wait! This is the same shape as the round end. Okay, the end with the antenna. What do you call it? Oh, the bow. The next step is the above deck athwartship deck beam. Up to this point, the model has had reference marks to keep me somewhat on track. I decided to make my own here. The small printed square/rhombus is where the deck beam would come thru in real life. If I put a hole thru the hull at the center to the square, it will give me a reference point. Hole on the inner hull. No worries about the hole showing. It will be covered up. The deck beam should run from hole to hole. Unfortunately, first I need to install the deck beam support/cathead thingy. I guess I COULD install the deck beam first...why start following instructions now. A couple things have got to line up. First, the tab at the bottom of the support SHOULD line up with the hole. Second, it SHOULD be perpendicular to the beam. Later a knee will be added from the beam to the support and it should be square. Unfortunately if I do that it will not line up with the edge of the top plank which angles slightly aft. Roll the dice and see what happens. The support is about a millimeter to far aft but I can live with that as long as the one on the other side is the same. Green is the hole. Red is the tab. The top of the support sticks out from the plank a little, but acceptable, in my view. I may live to regret that. It's time to trim frames and touch up the edges with paint.
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Chris, Outstanding!!! Very crisp. So, what is the deal with the rudder? Did they have to untie and retie the rudder lines each time they altered course?
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I have been bitten by the cog bug. After watching Chris Coyle's log, I invested in the wooden version of Wutender Hund (Woody Dog). It arrived a few days ago and I just had a good look at it. My intent is to bash it slightly so it is a non-military/more commercial version. I am very impressed with it. The instructions seem more detailed and the parts more crisp. Don't get me wrong, the parts on the Cardy Dog are good quality and the laser cutting is top notch. The cardboard, however, has issues as I mentioned above when it is hot or humid. My first reaction is to set aside Cardy Dog and start working on Woody Dog. I vow not to, but...… <build me. build me.>
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Experiment complete. Aware of the risks posed in post #5, I took my experiment outside with adequate ventilation. I still ended up with a slight headache and mild buzz. I took a gob of contact cement and placed it in a shallow container, mixed in some acetone. It thinned a little on the surface but the result was not great. At this point the bottle is nearly unusable, so I will put some acetone in the bottle and see how that works...give it some time to work.
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Throbbing engines, indeed! Back in the 60's, when I was a wee lad, we used to ride on an old PT boat converted for tourists...The Pink Flamingo. I still remember the engines. No 50 cals.
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All, Many thanks. I have no idea what toluene is, but a check of AMAZON says it is more expensive than I want to pay. Better to toss the bottle and get new. I will get some 100% acetone and try it out without burning down the house or asphyxiating myself. Bob, I get my Cali banned stuff from Arizona.
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I'm not sure if I am posting in the correct forum, but I can't find one for glue. What is the best way to thin contact cement. I am using Weldwood DAP contact cement on my card model. I am down to a third of the bottle and it is getting a bit thick... coming out in gobs. I want to thin it down a bit so I can continue to use it. I see nowhere on the bottle the recommended "clean up" material.
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Newly dabbling in cogs, I have become interested in medieval ships, particularly of northern Europe...but not exclusively. As Louie da Fly said, I have been lured to the dark side (wait...I thought that was scratch building). Expanding from the cog, the more I read the more confused I get. On one site it lists Lisa von Lubeck as a late era cog or krewaal. Some have noted that this is also a caravel....is it? MATTHEW, the replica of John Cabot's ship is listed as a caravel also. When I think caravel, I think Nina and Pinta while MATT and LISA look more like carracks. I plan to do more research, including reading Louie (Stephen) and other medieval modelers, but thumbnail...how is LISA a caravel and not a carrack?
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Postscript: I was able to dry fit the three aftmost port side planks. Notches not withstanding, the planks fit with room to spare. The gaps between the strakes are smaller than planned, but that is not a bad thing.
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Is there an easy wooden tall ship out there to build?
Chuck Seiler replied to thegrindre's topic in Wood ship model kits
Model Expo went thru a rough patch a few years ago (as I recall) but they are a thriving business. I regularly get emails from them regarding sales and specials. Their customer service is normally top notch and John Garcia responds quickly to emails. I believe he frequents this forum. As mentioned before, if you have problems with parts from their kits (Model Expo kits), they happily replace the parts. -
Is there an easy wooden tall ship out there to build?
Chuck Seiler replied to thegrindre's topic in Wood ship model kits
'Don't fry bacon in the nude' NOW you tell me. I would NOT recommend either the Model Expo 18th Century Longboat or a card model-particularly the paper ones. I have built both (all 3?). The longboat is a great model. Looks simple but really is not, considering planking needs to be PERFECT since you see both sides of it (inside and out). There are many great card models out there as well except I find the smaller parts deform when removing from the sheet. Alos I find it harder to work with than wood. Stay away from paper at this point. If you have a level of dexterity above me, you might want to try the SHIPYARD model of the ALERT. Nina and Pinta are good choices in that they are relatively simple. You also have an option with Nina in that you can build it as it was before Columbus got to the Canary Islands or after...he had the rig changed to better handle the expected wind conditions...but that may be a project too far. As Bob Cleek said, we really don't know exactly what they looked like, only close approximation. At this point in your model building career, that is probably not an issue. Monetary cost is only one measure of cost. Some models are very poor quality and some have really poor instructions. A slightly more expensive kit may be a better choice if it enhances your building experience. Poor instructions can be overcome by the many fine build logs here. Poor material can only be remedied by scratch building/bashing. Expect to make mistakes. Most people do first time around. I still am 20 years later. Get a bottle of alcohol (2, actually...1 bottle of rubbing alcohol and 1 of scotch). Use the rubbing to de-glue your gluing errors. Fix the problems...don't try and paper over them The just compound. Enjoy the experience! -
Yeah, not anymore. In all cases I needed to cut down the bottom of the extensions. The first couple I didn't, so they extend(ed) way high. Even when cutting down, many of the extensions were too high and needed to be trimmed. I already know that the top and bottom notches are too small and that the overall length of the extensions are probably too short to accept all three inner strakes. I have been thinking about how I will handle that. Definitely bend to fit, paint to match.
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