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It is: .http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/4022429/The-sinking-of-the-Belgrano-We-were-right.html Jan
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grrrrr.... one minute.....oh well, at least there is no need for me to look for a picture of Arklow Friesland
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one of 16 It's a churruca clas destroyer, there are 16 of them.... Jan
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Santissima, I said
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It does look like Kortenaer, but I don't think 'we' even had a double white band around the funnel... Jan
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But the spanish alsedo-class (early twenites) has 4 funnels, and not 2 The other class is not early twenties, but does look very, very much like yours. (or is 1925 still early, in your definition?) Jan
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Yeah, santissima trinidad
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Which cuts do you mean, actually? Those oval shaped 'holes' in the stern are made by Mamoli. The gratings are glued on to the deck, and a small strip of wood (slightly thicker than the deck planking is glued around them. The gratings themseleves are build up from prefabricated (by Mamoli) strips of wood. Jan
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Yes, it is the newest Friesland. I was hoping you would have some problems in finding her. (There is almost no reference of her under the HrMs abbreviation, and she only in service since early this year.) Jan
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hmmm... didn't expect that. I'll look for an other ship. Give some minutes Jan
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Hi Remco, Since when is 'you can't see it in the final result' a valid argument for you? (oops, did I say that ?? ) Jan
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The paint-no paint is one you can only answer yourself. Frohlich is very mucht on the non-paint side. I took a small text-fragment from one of my books written by Ab Hoving (Ships of Abel Tasman), former head of the ship-department in the Dutch Rijksmuseum. He is using modelmaking as a way of discovering how ships at the time were build, and how they did look/could have looked. From tha point, he takes a very strong position in the paint debate:
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Just a guess: HMCS Niobe?
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Gentlemen, I did a little bit of shopping: I flipped the picture. It is indeed Gelderland (I posted her before in her new appearances.) She was a Dutch ship, build around the turn of the precvious century (HOlland Clas Cruiser, laid down in 1898), the Germans took her over and did a rebuild into a Flak ship (Niobe) aroudn 1943. Her largest feat was the fact that she took Paul Kruger from South Afrika to Europe after the BoerWar. The picture is taken in her period in life that she was fitted for being a target ship in 1941 (already in German service) Jan
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Gentlemen, On the wrong track altogether. Although roughly correct datewise. Jan
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What has Beef Wellington to do with a Jason class screw corvette? Jan
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Wolves! Jan
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Ah, don't think you mean MUtiny on the Bounty Jan
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eeeeh, there should be a number on her side, which will speed up our process of identification. It looks like the sloop's you mentioned before... Black swan or something like it? Jan
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Google gives you the choice between iuploading the pic itself into search, or just the url of the picture you want to use. copy-past the url of the pic as uploaded here was enough for this one. The strange thing is that sometimes google still recognizes a heavily edited picture, and sometimes a very small change is enough to foll the program. I still don't know what the determining factor is.... Jan
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Google can still read the name Jan
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Gentlemen, Can I interrupt your very entertaining morning talks? just to confirm that she is indeed HrMs Overijssel (D815), one of the 8 Friesland class ships. (build in 1955, in active service till 1982) Jan
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You've got the right nationality. Jan
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