-
Posts
3,845 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Gallery
Events
Everything posted by KeithAug
-
Exactly so! Back to boats:- I did a bit of pencil and paper draughting and dimensioned up the centres for cutting the various circles that will eventually form the core of the frame. I then glued the template to the brass sheet and mounted it on the mill. The various diameters of circular features were then cut with a step drill. At this stage I also drilled location holes for pinning the thickened sections of the frame in position (red arrow). These were drilled in a location that would subsequently be removed. I then started sawing away the unwanted parts of the frame. I didn't have coarse enough jewellers saw blade but I ploughed on anyway, taking an excessive amount of time and breaking an excessive number of blades. I really must listen to my own mental advice in future and put stuff aside until I have the correct tools to hand. Anyway - some time later:- Next a bit of filing:- Then the 2 thickening plates were cut and drilled with 4 holes. The lower pair of holes match the location pins in the central frame piece (pins already inserted in the photo). The upper pair of holes are for retaining screws to clamp the ticketing plates for later machining operations. They are also in the scrap area and will be cut away later. Now back to moaning about planned obsolescence. 🙂
-
Ian - BMW tried it but it turns out that the public weren't as stupid as BMW thought they were. When I heard about it my thought was "never go into a BMW showroom ever again". See official update below. BMW has decided to stop charging car owners a subscription fee to use their heated car seats, though the German automaker remains committed to paid on-demand services. The manufacturer began selling access to factory-installed heated seats and the heated steering wheel in 2020, though only in some markets, such as South Korea and the United Kingdom. In South Korea, seat heat was available for the equivalent of about $18 per month, or $406 if purchased in perpetuity. In the UK, the price was about the same. This was after the company said it would charge an $80 annual subscription fee to use Apple CarPlay in BMWs and subsequently reversed that decisionfollowing customer complaints.
-
Veszett, I know they do it on purpose I just think they should make an exception for a 70 year old pensioner. Fortunately I avoided buying a car where I had to rent the heated seats and steering wheel. I think this subscription world is mad. Eberhard - My wife reminds me that she won it at a school headteachers conference some years before she retired in 2012. It may be that it is 2 decades old. It's useless but still going strong - a bit like me.
-
Not much progress this week - life gets very confusing when you get to my age. The easy bit was buying a new car. I then realised that my old and trusty iPod was no longer supported by the new cars software. Accepted the iPod is over a decade old but I like it and I don't want to pay a subscription to buy access to music I already own. So then I thought I'll buy a flash drive and put my music on that. I did, but once again the car refused to co-operate. It would only access a few of the albums on the drive and ignored the other 90%. So then I thought I will put all my music on my iPhone. This wasn't my preferred option as it only has 64gb of memory which I tend to fill quite quickly with videos of the grandchildren. pictures for my build log etc., etc. However it seemed the only option. The next problem was the MacBook refused to talk to the iPhone. It turned out that the iPhone software hadn't been updating because of lack of memory so I had to transfer the grandchildren on to an ancient iMac which paradoxically was quite happy to talk to the phone. This then freed up enough memory on the phone to accept a software update. Finally after significant frustrations the MacBook and phone struck up a conversation. This took about 24 hours in total to sort out. I might have been better served by not changing the car!!!!!!! I never really believed that IT made things easier. After all they managed to build Dreadnought in 13 months when the only available IT was a phone and a mechanical typewriter.
-
I'm nearly at the end hull sanding. I just needed to build up the keel slightly. I also needed to get the transom to the correct shape and "fix" the shape by attaching a pre-shaped piece of ply. Shaping the ply took a bit of fiddling with card templates but eventually I sorted it. I have had enough woodworking for a while so I am now figuring out how to make rudder post. I plan to make this out of brass. The key complication is that the lower portion (red arrows) is somewhat thicker than the remainder of the frame surrounding the screw. I plan to fabricate it out of 3 pieces of 0.1" brass plate. In drawing the yellow is the 0.1" portion while the orange is the thickened 0.3" portion.
-
I like it when solution develop - it's so much more educational. Nicely made smoke stacks Eric.
- 392 replies
-
I guess the politicians don't know any engineers!!!!!!! This isn't quite true in the UK because the Conservative Energy Spokesman in the House of Lords is a certain Lord Martin Callahan. In the 1990's he worked in my engineering department. None of my staff were very disappointed when he left to pursue his political ambitions, frankly as an engineer he was as much good as a chocolate teapot. His political rise was somewhat metioric but on energy matters he sill talks out of the wrong end of his digestive tract. God help us.
-
Dear Ian. And I thought I was a grumpy old man. I have read your missive to my wife and she agrees you win hands down. I was trying to explain it all to my non techy brother in law. Average electric vehicle - 2.5 miles per KWh. Decent range of say 450 miles requires 180 kWh battery. Decent charging time of say 10 minutes requires a 1080 KW charger. That's like plugging in 540 fan heaters! We don't have the grid capacity to feed all those electric cars and won't have for years. I tried self charging hybrids for the first time last Tuesday and loved the "get up and go". I know they don't solve the environmental problem but they are a load of fun. Keith
-
Andy - Yes. In the engine room area without the balsa they of course need to be edge glued, elsewhere the glue will be applied to both the edge and back of the planks. I too think she has lovely sleek lines - it was the one of the main reasons I wanted to build her. Thank you all for your comments - much appreciated. I have spent the last week touring round car showrooms in an attempt to find a replacement for my current 10 year old car. Indecision, indecision, indecision.
-
Andy, Pat, Keith, John, Greg, Hakan, Gary, Thank you all for your encouragement and "Little Ben" comments. Hakan - great news re June - does it have a personal pronoun yet? I am well on with the precision sanding. As previously stated I coloured the frame edges as a sanding guide. The preliminary rough sanding was done with 60 grit aluminium oxide paper held on a 2" x 8" cork block with rounded edges. The surface was reduced until small areas of the frame edges started to lose their colour. I then switched to 80m grit (on the same sanding block) and continued to remove the frame edge colouring. I sanded both sides alternatively while trying to maintain similar frame edge sanding patterns on each side. I proceeded in this way until the majority of the coloured edges were removed. I worked slowly from stern to bow. Gradually producing balsa snow drifts. I am about to switch to 120 grit before progressing with the final sanding / fairing.
About us
Modelshipworld - Advancing Ship Modeling through Research
SSL Secured
Your security is important for us so this Website is SSL-Secured
NRG Mailing Address
Nautical Research Guild
237 South Lincoln Street
Westmont IL, 60559-1917
Model Ship World ® and the MSW logo are Registered Trademarks, and belong to the Nautical Research Guild (United States Patent and Trademark Office: No. 6,929,264 & No. 6,929,274, registered Dec. 20, 2022)
Helpful Links
About the NRG
If you enjoy building ship models that are historically accurate as well as beautiful, then The Nautical Research Guild (NRG) is just right for you.
The Guild is a non-profit educational organization whose mission is to “Advance Ship Modeling Through Research”. We provide support to our members in their efforts to raise the quality of their model ships.
The Nautical Research Guild has published our world-renowned quarterly magazine, The Nautical Research Journal, since 1955. The pages of the Journal are full of articles by accomplished ship modelers who show you how they create those exquisite details on their models, and by maritime historians who show you the correct details to build. The Journal is available in both print and digital editions. Go to the NRG web site (www.thenrg.org) to download a complimentary digital copy of the Journal. The NRG also publishes plan sets, books and compilations of back issues of the Journal and the former Ships in Scale and Model Ship Builder magazines.