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Everything posted by highlanderburial
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Laying out the frames and assembling the lateral supports. Really spend some time drawing out where the frames need to go. I glued them down with hot glue. Frames 6 and 10 have a specific orientation so be careful with those 2. The parts slid into place. Use epoxy to glue the supports together to keep them flexible.
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Greetings All, This is my build log for a USCG FRC (fast response cutter) at a length of 154 feet. This class is only a few years old and even though it is intended for R/C I will be building it as static for display. I will likely post a Youtube video of the unboxing of the kit. So far from what I have seen this looks like a great kit by Dumas! Pictures are from official USCG sources. Hull line diagram is from the actual vessel plans. 154-WPC_85_301_1_-_B.pdf
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3d printing crew figures
highlanderburial replied to highlanderburial's topic in 3D-Printing and Laser-Cutting.
I have the Anycubic Photon. It takes up the same space as a blender. I use a tupperware pickle strainer full of isobutyl alcohol to clean the parts. After cleaning I have a UV Spotlight that shines down on a lazy susan which I can spin to move the object. The total space is maybe 3 feet by 2 feet. I HIGHLY recommend getting a 3D SLA printer to make even routine parts. -
Model ship stations identification help request
highlanderburial replied to highlanderburial's topic in Wood ship model kits
This is a huge help thanks! -
2021 NRG CONFERENCE
highlanderburial replied to kurtvd19's topic in NAUTICAL RESEARCH GUILD - News & Information
Great thread! I wouldn't mind Toledo. I have never been to their museum and it has been quite some time since I have been there. The Detroit Maritime museum would be a good second choice in this area but ironically the airport is far closer to Toledo than Detroit! TW -
Greetings all, A friend and I were recently donated a large cast off collection of completed ship models by a woman whose relative had died. Among these were 3 built up kits of cross section/stations. One of which was the battle station kit still sold by Mantua. Another is of a "whip staff" steering station which I recall seeing but do not remember who made it. The last appears to be a ships galley complete with oven bricks and galley prisoner? In addition to ship modeling I like to dabble in figure painting in multiple scales. I wanted to put some paint on the figures and use them at club displays or shows for nautical demonstrations. The previous builder apparently painted almost nothing as even his ship models have large quantities of bare pewter/lead exposed. My hope was to find an ad or box cover as a basic guide to see what these were intended to look like. Here are a few of the pictures of the items. I am not new to ship modeling but I am having a hard time even on the internet finding an image of these kits. Thanks in advance, TW
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3d printing crew figures
highlanderburial replied to highlanderburial's topic in 3D-Printing and Laser-Cutting.
The biggest factor for 3d printing figures is the starting digital model (high res or low res) and how fine the printer can print per line. My printer can do lines down to .01 microns (1/10th a human hair roughly) so it can make them pretty fine. To succinctly answer your scale question there are presently 1/350th scale sailors for sail as a low res digital file. For that size it is probably more than adequate for a viewer to see guys with covers arms and legs in various poses that look the part. My biggest concern would be getting something this small off the print bed which usually involves a small flat head screw driver. I am learning to print with supports that make this process less damaging but it is still a learning curve. I would easily think a figure designed for 1/48 could be scaled down to 1/100 with a pretty fair amount of details retained. In the picture is one of my print failures (due to file corruption on the leg). In the picture I printed a female Archer at 1/24th scale, 1/35, 1/52, 1/48. Not pictured was the Archer in 1/87 and 1/96. These were all done using the same file and at the same time. At 1/96 the bow was VERY thin but most of the details translated well. Keep in mind I got this printer with resin for around 275 dollars American. It is NOT the too if the line but will easily do what I need it to. I hope this helps! -
3d printing crew figures
highlanderburial replied to highlanderburial's topic in 3D-Printing and Laser-Cutting.
At first I spent about 6 hours in the free blender program but then just used Hero Forge miniature maker (super fun!) and spent about 20 bucks for the files! -
Greetings all, While I am pretty sure posting anything made from a 3d printer is probably bad form here I wanted to share a side project I worked on over the weekend. I personally love seeing crew figures on model boat/ships but always have a hard time finding them in the scales or poses I want. This weekend I digitally drew out 4 "age of sail" style crew in 4 poses in my 3d aoftware. I then printed them in 1/48 ish scale. The awesome part about having these designs is I can size them up to 40mm or down to 3mm tall. I think they would look at home on a pirate ship or navy vessel depending on how they get painted. In the second photo I have compared my prints to an Amati figure (right) and a 1/48 scale figure on the left. The figure with the saber was literally transposed from a Captain Morgan rum ad! The UV light is used to cure the resin. Has anyone else done this?
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Final Call! Sorry about the lack of follow up on this one. I struggled to complete this as the kit was infuriatingly inaccurate! I also found out the ship had lined out basketball and shuffleboard courts on the main deck. I added those using super thin pinstripe tape. The hand rails were finished and put in place using some new thinner super glue I got off amazon with a really amazing application tip. Finally here is the real comparison I wanted to from the get go. I constantly get asked how the SS United States compares in size to the Titanic. Well here you go! Thanks to everyone who followed this thread. My overall rating on the Glencoe kit is unless you LOVE cutting plastic with your Dremel and are willing to put in some SERIOUS time with plans and photo etch I would look elsewhere for a good model of the SS United States. Still the experience of painting her and working around her decks made me feel what a loss she would be if she went to the breaker's yard. -TW
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I thought the gaping giant holes in the deck were for a lift boom or something but then saw this little blurb on the instructions.
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Lower pinstripe added. Handrails added to the upper bridge. A few if the very toylike life boats added.
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Green decks added! I also backed the port and stbd side passage ways with acetate to make the model more accurate.
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I used my Dremel to cut all the solid handrails down to deck level. I felt like I was vandalizing the kit but one it was done I liked the look of it much better! You can see the handrail decals in my picture. I am using a Rainbow Photoetch 1/400 replacement. So far so good!
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Having finished my Titanic kit I wanted to build the SS United States as a size comparison. The Glencoe kit is one step above "bathtub toy". I intend to replace the decal hand rails with photoetch.
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I love Maine shipbuilding history. I bought a Pinky kit to represent a Maine boat without any intention of any historical tie-ins. That model is in my massive pile of kits to build but your emphasis on it here may move it up in my que. Good luck to you sir.
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