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Everything posted by GuntherMT
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I did the same as Jon, I glued the cleats to the shrouds and then tied them with thread. I believe that I used a tiny drop of CA glue though.
- 974 replies
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Your progress is amazingly fast now Frank. Are you only showing the nails in the exposed side knees as the others will be covered by planking?
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Thanks for the info about the ink Dave. I'm sure that was what I ran into.
- 194 replies
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As always, your craftsmanship is beautiful, and you continue to come up with great tools to help you make everything perfect. Fantastic.
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Tools and Supplies for My "Shipyard"
GuntherMT replied to daveward's topic in Modeling tools and Workshop Equipment
Unless you can find a hairdryer really cheap at a thrift store, consider a heat gun instead. They can be had for less than 20 bucks on Amazon brand new, and they generate a higher temperature and get to temperature faster than a hair dryer, with less 'wind', which works great for our purposes. I don't suggest trying to use a heat gun to dry your hair though, that might not work out so well. -
Can i live without a BYRNES TABLE SAW
GuntherMT replied to shihawk's topic in Modeling tools and Workshop Equipment
I'm curious as to why you needed to remove the insert to change blades? I've changed blades multiple times and as long as I've lowered the blade via the blade adjustment first, I've never had to remove the insert to make the change. I don't get any dust out the bottom of the saw at all in operation when attached to my shop-vac, so maybe your vacuum isn't performing well? The only dust I have to collect after sawing is when using the carbide blade for large cuts, a lot of debris is created that doesn't drop down into the area served by the dust collection port (i.e. it remains on top of the saw). -
Be *very* careful (and do some experiments on scrap) before using black ink. It soaks into the wood and bleeds, and never stops bleeding when you apply other stuff over it (like if you plan to use a wipe on poly), and then bleeds off onto other pieces of wood. I used ink on my wales and then spent a huge number of hours later trying to get them to stop bleeding black into everything near them, and then trying to seal them so that the ink wouldn't wipe off onto the rag and then color up the surrounding wood when I cleaned the hull. I'll never use ink on wood again without a lot of experimentation on mock-ups first.
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Great progress Frank! As always, looks great, really looking forward to seeing it again in person, hopefully next month.
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No, but it is nice if they have a link to a log or gallery behind the text so that people can go visit them if they do exist. Your signature can really be whatever you want it to be, but there was a recent post by one of the admins that they should be kept to a reasonable size (they shouldn't be longer than an average post, and no need to use gigantic font sizes, etc.).
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Make a test piece using the same glue on some scrap rope. After your test piece is dry, try using a small brush with alcohol to clean off the excess glue. Since the glue pictured is water resistant you can't just use water like you could for regular white glue or yellow wood glue. Since it it PVA, the alcohol should clean it up. For future rigging, I'd suggest using white glue rather than yellow, and dilute it for rigging. If you can get the knots/rigging tight without glue, then clear matte varnish to secure it also works well for me. Good luck.
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What kind of glue, leaving what kind of stains? Just discolored line or is it a 'shine' (from CA) that you are trying to eliminate? If it's just a shine, then just use a matte varnish (clear) or matte medium (also clear) and it will cover the shine without any color changes. Tip - Use matte varnish or matte medium as your glue when working with fittings/rope (or a mixture of white glue + water) and it won't be visible when it dries.
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Looking very nice! I really need to grab this off the shelf and build it one of these days.
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- 18th century longboat
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I didn't trust myself to get the placement right on the sweep ports (or anything else) so I filled the entire area between the bulkhead extensions from deck to the top. MS gives you plenty of basswood, and it doesn't take a lot of time since it's not precision work (it will all be covered), and it also served to give me a solid foundation for the interior bulkhead planking.
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You could try putting them in place, and then applying heat from a heat gun or hair-dryer. When the wood cools after being heated it tends to retain the shape, which may also be why steaming is often used, in addition to the water, there is heat!
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Welcome back Frank, and nice job on that mast wedge, looks very nice.
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Coverage question?
GuntherMT replied to vossy's topic in Painting, finishing and weathering products and techniques
Give it a bit of time, I'm sure others will chime in after they see the question. Not everyone reads everything on the forums every day. -
I'd certainly like to see the result of that method Henry! Edit: Actually, I just found the set of pictures where you show that method on your build log. Interesting, although at that small of a size I'm not sure I would do it myself. I think it would make more sense visually to do that on blocks that were quite a bit larger on a larger scale ship. Sort of comes back to the 'what do you think looks good' part of our hobby!
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Cool. I figured with your wood-working experience you knew what you were doing, but I felt like I should mention it just in case! Good looking guitar piece there!
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Hi Eric, I missed the last page or so of your log, my apologies, but just caught up and read your question about rigging small blocks. I posted a sort of 'mini-tutorial' on how I did the single blocks when rigging my cannon in my build log - don't know if it's too late or will help, but feel free to take a look: http://modelshipworld.com/index.php/topic/8085-armed-virginia-sloop-by-gunthermt-finished-model-shipways-scale-148/page-24#entry328294
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