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Jack12477

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Everything posted by Jack12477

  1. That's okay Denis, SOME of us will hang back and wait for you to finish before we run off to do another model !
  2. That's okay, Denis ! Yes the Nagger-in-chief does try to obfuscate us Native English talkers with his European lingo from time to time.
  3. Greg , in the last photo above there appears to be a small drill with a drill bit (orange disc on bit) , is that a hand drill or power drill (battery or line cord) ?
  4. Michael, I think Tamiya makes primer that comes in small bottles that would be suitable for airbrush use instead of the rattle cans. I haven't used my airbrush in years - I'm still trying to convert from Floquiil paints. I have some Valeljo but not their primer so no experience to offer you on that brand other than brush on work.
  5. Thanks Denis. Yes, I've been following your escapades with COG and RGL over there.
  6. It's the John W Brown - restored and displayed in Baltimore (MD) Inner Harbor - saw it couple years back when I took my granddaughter there to tour the USS Constellation and the submarine - submarine freaked her out but the Constellation fascinated her.
  7. Okay, I placed the order with HobbyLinc for the Liberty ship and The Sullivans Fletcher class kit. Will let ya'll know when they arrive.....
  8. Oops! You are right Lou, The Sullivans is a Fletcher Class. Should have looked at the Buffalo Navy Park site first before surfing HobbyLinc's website. Saves me buying a duplicate kit, more $$$ I can spend on PE. Thanks, Carl, I use rattle can primer a lot, with demise of Floquil, I've pretty much switched to Tamiya and Vallejo brands. I'll use the air brush for the camo and other finer detail painting, easier to control coverage than rattle can. I'm going to go with the two ships I've actually seen. I'll drop the DD445 kit from list. Going to Buffalo this summer to see my granddaughter so maybe I can get her to tour the ships with me. Greg, looked up that Seydlitz kit on HobbyLinc. Man, I could buy all three of my ship kits for the price of that one kit!
  9. Thanks Greg. Yes I tend to look for the "road less traveled" also and less expensive. The kits are available from HobbyLinc which is USA based so shipping is cheap and quick and I have dealt with them before so good experience there. Also found Alliance ModelWorks also USA based which has a fairly good looking selection of PE brass in 1:350 scale - saw some sheets for doors, hatches, railings that ran about $13 US a sheet plus shipping. So not too bad I think. Have to look at their web site a bit closer as I was just skimming it to get a ballpark feel for price/availability. I did a lot of 1:35 scale Tamiya tanks (WWII US and Europe) before I ventured into wood boat kits and I used an air brush for all the camo patterns (miss the Floquil paint tho) - also did some aircraft in camo. I'm a tad rusty but it will come back to me I'm sure. COG and I are old "buddies" on here so not a problem with his "bullying" - besides he's only a tad taller than me anyways. I'll let you know what I decide.
  10. Okay, you guys have now piqued my interest in going back to plastic models for a slight diversion. I found 3 kits in 1:350 scale on HobbyLinc for a pretty decent discount. Two are by Trumpeter, USS The Sullivans DD-537 and the USS Liberty ship John W Brown; the other kit is by Tamiya US Navy Fletcher Class DD445. I picked The Sullivans and the Liberty ship because the Sullivans is on display in Buffalo's (NY) waterfront park and the John W Brown is on display in Baltimore's Inner Harbor; both of which I have seen up close and personal. The Fletcher is just an interesting ship. Opinions please ! Get all three or a combo ???? Or forget it ???? Pros ?? Cons ??
  11. John, Keith, Tom, Scott, thank you for your condolences. It's been a rough couple of weeks. His funeral was last Friday. I'll be returning to the shipyard shortly.
  12. Mike, what material did you use to make the sail? It looks like you made a slot in the mast and boom to slide the sail into. Is that what you did?
  13. In American homes it is referred to as "clapboard" siding, Piet. Judging from Marcus' photos, I would say it is clapboard. On boats I think it is lapstrake as you say.
  14. Had a nun in 8th grade try to wack the back of my hand with a plastic ruler, at last second before contact, I clenched my fist tight and rotated it 90 degrees, ruler hit the thumb side of fist and shattered. man was she mad but never tried it on me again !
  15. Ok, just rigged the bosun chair to the rafters to watch, Greg. Whose got the popcorn?
  16. OC, for filler I used to use Squadron green putty (also comes as white putty) worked well to smooth and fill in gaps on plastic. Don't know if it is available in UK, I even have trouble finding it in the "colonies" lately.
  17. Al, when I did the furled sails on my Willie Bennett, I made the sails full size (scale full size), raised them to full height on mast, then slowly lowered them onto the boom folding them as I went (same way we fold the sails on the ice boats at end of day), then tied scale rope around them to secure them to the boom. Did the same with the jib and club foot. Furling a square rigged might be a little different, don't know.
  18. Thanks John. He passed away this morning at 6 AM Eastern time. Funeral arrangements haven't been finalized. He was 75.
  19. Mike, WOW, that gun stock oil really makes the wood pop. Nice job. Great job on the sails and battens, as well as all the brass work. Now if we could just shrink ourselves down we could take her for a nice sail. Glad you joined me for something different in subject matter.
  20. Sounds good to me, Chuck. I did make sails for my Willie Bennett from scratch, wasn't too daunting a task but I would love to see/learn other methods.
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