-
Posts
2,385 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Gallery
Events
Everything posted by dafi
-
Hello Kevin, thank you, that is also a possible possibility :-) Seen on smaller ships like Endeavor or on earlier ones as in the gallon´s time. In the museum ship in P. the lanyard is led inwards - possibly by a lead tube - and the standard lanyard to hold it sits underneath the beams. But as the whole section is a complete rebuild from the 20ies with plenty of bugs, there are plenty of own interpretations possible. :-) XXXDAn
-
Hello Dave, if you mean the deck beams, they actually are wood :-) Watered for some minutes and bent with the soldering iron - my girly did NOT allow her hot iron ;-) Worked very well an a once defined shape stays without suffering strain. The first ones that I applied "in the old days"were straight from straight stock and forced with force into the bow by the pillars and knees. #1262 Plastic is a bit more tricky as it wants to go back into its original form (whatever it was even before being extruded) but you could try boiling water to bend it. Cheers, Daniel
-
What a pity you couldn´t make it, you would have loved it. There were some other english speaking guests present :-) And I was caught in the act, taking the chance to get all the authorities present to have a small anchor workshop - experimental archeology. Thanks for archjofo for the picture! XXXDAn
-
Thank you Steve, here is a better shot, together with its builder Helmut, 80 years by now :-) He knows the art of making plastic models in a way, that even being close, one believes it to be wood. Even I got tricked! A very very lovely and kind guy he is :-) XXXDAn
-
Just being back from Augsburg, and I love Man staring at Goats Ships ... ...hihihihihihihihihi... It was marvelous, more than 70 people and about 50 models, and my small little plastic bug in between :-) XXXDan
-
Thank you Ian for the good story :-) Have been in Cornwall and Wales, Bristol not, was too much in the middle in between of that ;-) Had a check on the nails: https://www.google.de/search?q=bristol+nails&biw=1631&bih=1089&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&sqi=2&ved=0ahUKEwihpYruu7nLAhXoNpoKHbcOCtAQsAQIKQ Also Wikipedia.com mentions them in "Bristol" Also thank you Mark and druxey!!! Cheers, Daniel
-
As the great model maker meeting in Augsburg (near Munich) is approaching, I found it necessary to just knot some of the loose ends together. The officer´s hammocks have been prepared already for a long time ... ... and some more petiteness like a small desk and a chair for Mr Rivers the gunner ... ... some of the lumber to be seen on contemporary pictures: (under-)deck chairs and packages wrapped in sail cloth. And immediately we have some homeliness in the smallest confinements ... ... and soon all is shipshape und Bristol fashion for coming Saturday in Augsburg :-) Cheers, Daniel
-
Thank you Gerhard! And now, what were those parts? ...hihihihihi... They were a provocation!!! Why?!? As always, when i find obscure details, I just build and wait for the horrified outcries ;-) These parts are the shoes for the fishing david, mentioned in Marquardt and described by Lee, but only found two very vague contemporary drawings that do not really define the form. The shoe serves for the david not to damage the hull or channels and also avoids it sliding sidewards. To define the form of the shoe, of course the davit is necessary, just to fit like a shoe :-) Some blocks help rectangular sanding. Eine erhöhte rechtwinklige Unterlage und ein fixer Führungs- und ein geführter Schleifklotz sorgen für geraden Abschluss. As already done with the anchors, I used my Edding-technic ... ... as the color shows nicely ... ... if the sanding is getting even ... ... also at the conus. Applied some paint and it is finished fast ;-) And to see if the shoe fits, immediately applied to the place McKay suggests. But that looks strange as the deadeyes are in the way. I think one more deadeye aback there is the opening for the chasing gun, that would be the mire appropriate placement also no hammock netting in the way there, which would facilitate handling a lot. XXXDAn
-
Thank you Sirs, now back to the front, doing some catting :-) First mistreated some wood ... ... rounding things up ... ... and prepared for blackening. And there it already hangs ... ... depper darling, deeper ... ... ohohoh hihihigher ... ... and all on top ... I hope the next updates will get more exciting again :-) XXXDAn
-
The assembly was even easier than expected ... ... and once again had enough luck for the job :-) Cheers, DAniel
-
Ok, some more Brain Salad Surgery ... Nurse - scalpel, swab, scrapping certificate! In those days, when I was still jung and inexperienced but full of zest and enthusiasm, those days that I was not yet able to do my own ropework, and then those days of often enjoying showing off the moving of the rudder, but by now the gear is looking a bit deranged, a tad tousled ... ... so out came some brave cuts ... ... but also the big table was shredded to pieces :-( So carved a bar of blocks ... same nice bondage with the 4 sisters ... ... and the most difficult, the clearing off the traces of old glue, the patented kardan drill made it possible ... ... and prepared the new tackles.
-
Everything to delight you Gerhard, my pleasure!!! But then disaster, the eminent authority from my german forum destroyed my hope of getting more "like"s ... ... "the securing thread of the hook should be done in figures of 8" he said, how can one do such a failure ... ... so back into the ship yard and - this time with 3 spectacles one placed over the other - some micro chirurgic minimal invasive wizardry to satisfy my master. Then on onto the other side ... ... and with the experience even the smartening of the splice came out more ship shape and Bristol fashion. Then used my drawing plate ... ... to get the small toggle for the securing line. And a small overview. Looks great, but dear Dirk/Dubz started a discussion in our german forum about the rope extension, if this one was a correct feature. The chain is shown on many models, the rope not ... XXXDAn
-
Thank you Mark for reminding me at this thesis, have to scan it again for ideas that escaped to me in the days. Unbelievable, how certain topics get the full attention ;-) Thank you Sirs!!! As I am told being jumpy, I jump from the far front to the far back of the boat - mind the fully framed marine-technological technical terms ;-) So went on for the rudder pendents. Used a 1,5 mm Evergreen rod and made a core hole with 0,5 mm ... ... and enlarged to 0,7 mm, lengthened to 1 mm and used a cherry miller to round the edges. First trial with a properly smartened rope was far too thick ... ... next trial with just the splice being smartened was far better in appearance. Still a lashing for that the hook stays in place ... ... and things are already in place. XXXDAn
-
I would guess that the weather had much more an influence upon the calculation ;-) On cold windy days with a lot of spray I would guess, one would not have to wait to long for a seat to get free ... By the way, small trivia, did you realise it in MaC, THE film, the sequence, in the pursuit in the icy stormy waether, everybody hanging in the shrouds to balance the ship, but one who appears to be sitting and easing off ?!? I think no good idea! XXXDAn
-
@Sal A small detail, very often seen in dutch drawings, here analog the ones in the stern ... ... also to be found on the heads. Also Colbert shows something alike: I just do not know if this was still in use with the Royal Navy or if a bucket and a wet finger was meant to do the job. @Jason: I remember an order for the constitution that the pi**ing in the hold and other areas was meant to be stopped. I do not remember the source or details.
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.