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Everything posted by Jack12477
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Sorry! Don't have any way of making a video ! But using their miniature tools is pretty easy. Just practice on some scrap pieces of wood till you get the feel for it. I use it the same way I use a full size plane. If you want the Lee Valley Veritas miniatures I would purchase their block plane first.
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Modelling locks or Latches
Jack12477 replied to jackieofalltrades's topic in Metal Work, Soldering and Metal Fittings
Have you looked at the door latch Michael Mott created for his Bristol Cutter build ? Start Here and scroll forward in time. -
Thanks Edward. It was a fun project. Now if "climate change" will be kind to us this winter and let the Hudson River freeze to a thickness and area we can safely use, we may get to take it for a sail. Of course, there are still some tune-ups to be done, starting with sharpening those runner blades 😉 I am thinking about scratch building a model of Manhasset later in the season, the dual cockpit should look cool, especially since I now know exactly how it attaches to the backbone. Probably do it in the same scale as the Rocket.
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Yesterday (Saturday) about a bake's dozen of us gathered at the farm of a fellow ice boat club member to reassemble the Manhasset and make sure we had all the parts. Unfortunately installing all the hardware and getting the boat realigned and the mast rigging sorted out (even tho all the stays were labeled) took more time than we anticipated so we ran out of daylight and decided to forego, for now, trying to step the mast. As the sun was setting in the west we finally go all of the components loaded back into the trailer. We used the trailer's crane to lift the backbone and runner plank into the trailer. Photos of the events follow: Installing the main runners to the runner plank Carrying the backbone from the lean-to shelter and aligning it on the runner plank and fastening the gammon straps that hold the runner plank to the backbone (it took 10 people to carry the backbone) Assembled with both cockpits installed With less than an hour of daylight remaining we decided to stop at this point, disassemble the boat and using the crane load it into its trailer. And finally the motley crew of restorers (sorry for picture darkness - I gave the camera to someone and somehow the camera got switched from AUTO to Manual) And with that chapter closed we will resume the building of the Constellation. Stay tuned !
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Chris is this Thread "how to avoid twisted lanyards" any help ?
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Greetings from Chicago and winter is coming
Jack12477 replied to ThirdCoast's topic in New member Introductions
America's Inland Fresh Water Sea aka Great Lakes = Northern Coast 😉😉😉😉😉 Oh yea! Canada's south coast Welcome to MSW, ThirdCoast -
Converting a Backyard Shed into a Model Workshop
Jack12477 replied to Hank's topic in Modeling tools and Workshop Equipment
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I don't know with certainty but I would surmise it was named after the original yacht club to which the original owner belonged. The family in Iowa who sold us the boat so it could be returned to the Hudson Valley provided us with this information which they had received from the Manhasset Bay Yacht Club. "An original Hudson River racing ice yacht of the 350 ft class, it was designed and built by George Buckhout in Poughkeepsie NY around 1912. Buckhout and his father, Jacob who was really the pioneer in ice yacht design, built hundreds of ice yachts mostly for the rich and famous who resided on the Hudson. Jacob built the largest ice yacht in the world "Icicle" for John Roosevelt and George build one for Franklin Roosevelt ("the Hawk"). "The Manhasset" was the only yacht built by Buckhout that had a double cockpit. She was originally built for a naval architect by the name of Gardner, who was a member of the Manhasset Bay Yacht Club of Port Washington, Long Island, New York . The first owner of the "The Manhasset" gained attention by the wonderful qualities of the schooner, "The Atlantic", which won the race across the Atlantic Ocean in 1905. Garden's performance with smaller yachts stamped him as one of the leading naval architects of the world. In 1913, "The Manhasset" was listed with four other ice boats in the year book of the Manhasset Bay Yacht Club, and in the February 22, 1914, issue of "Yachting", the ice boat was racing with old-timers on Manhasset Bay. On January 20, 1918, The New York Times reported on the seven fastest ice boats engaged in two races over the 15-mile triangular course of the Manhasset Bay Yacht Club. "The Manhasset" took second place in the morning race and won the afternoon race. Again in 1926 and 1927, the boat was listed in the year book of the Manhasset Bay Yacht Club" And now it is back in the Hudson Valley owned by the Hudson River Ice Yacht Club, founded in 1885. Footnote: John A Roosevelt was one of the founders of the Hudson River Ice Yacht Club, its first Commodore, and was the uncle of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 32nd President of United States
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Well, we've completed the restoration of the Manhassett ice yacht on Saturday, 8/15. This past Tuesday, 8/20, a group of club members loaded her onto a member's truck and took her back across the river to Tivoli/Red Hook to be stored in her trailer in the barn until we get ice. We are tentatively going to do a setup and mast stepping on Saturday, 9/12 with a little celebratory champagne as social distancing allows. Some photos below: (3 coats of Marine Varnish applied) O Guides for the forestays that hold the bow down - countering the upward pull of the sails on the backbone The skeg is reattached - this protects the tiller (rear skate) from damage from an ice hummock and from falling into an open crack in the ice. It will bounce the stern upward if it hits something - it is also sacrificial. I will post photos later of the setup and mast stepping so you can see the ice yacht fully assembled. Then I guess it will be back to the basement bunker, err model shop, to resume working on the Constellation.
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Glad you enjoyed it ! Check out this one with Brass Band taken on the same day, this one shows more of our fleet and the River. The band came down on their own from Bard College campus which is a couple miles upriver. Yes, the heeling, or hiking as ice boaters call it, is exhilarating but dangerous. I've seen runner planks snap under the strain, and boaters spin out while hiking. They do it for effect but it does slow the boat a bit. It puts a lot of strain on the boat unlike a hulled "wet water" boat. I am off to work on the restoration again today.
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