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Roger Pellett

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Everything posted by Roger Pellett

  1. I received news today that my book, Whaleback Ships and the American Steel Barge Company recently published by Wayne State University Press has been selected as a finalist for a Minnesota Book Award. Winners of the award will be announced this April 6. Roger
  2. There were square sterned clipper ships. See Crother’s book. Having said this I believe that this model should be considered to be Folk Art, not built to exact scale but intended to convey the builder’s impression of a real or imagined sailing vessel. It’s value lies in the fact that your grandpa built it. Give it a good cleaning (Q Tips and saliva), repair any damage, and fix the rigging. By putting it in some sort of protective case future generations will have a tangible link to him. I would not try to improve on what he did. Roger
  3. Wow Bob you have some beautiful equipment. As I said above, my ships curves were acquired during my student days and I have an abbreviated set, no mahogany box. Roger
  4. Another suggestion, Although I said above that “paper is cheap,”. If you are going to try your hand at lofting, buy several sheets of frosted Mylar drafting film. When I learned to make lines drawings years ago we used paper and then traced the result in ink onto vellum. The lofting process requires that you will do a lot of erasing and multiple erasures on paper can result in a smudged up mess. Mylar film is easy to erase. Roger
  5. Bob and Nick, I’ve really enjoyed this series of posts. To the set of books recommended above, for a beginner I highly recommend the two books written by Harold Hahn. In these books his explanation of lofting is directed at the model builder. He also presents a method for building a plank on frame model which if carefully followed will produce excellent results. Hahn’s method has been criticized by some builders as his framing is stylized and his method does not follow the practice of building a real ship. I don’t agree with this. Using his method a beginner can take a lines drawing like you show above and build a unique and beautiful model. I have personally done this. I personally enjoy making hull lines drawings (lofting) by hand. I still have my K&E Ships curves that I bought new as a student 50+ years ago. I also have a set of lead drawing “ducks” that I made at the same time. These are used to hold down a wooden spline bent around a set of plotted points. You will not need all of this stuff to start. You can get by with a couple of French curves bought at an office supply store. Splines can be easily ripped from straight grained construction lumber and held down with tacks driven into an improvised MDF drawing board. Personally, I suggest just trying to do it and erasing and redoing things as you go. As they say, “Paper is cheap!” Drafting Ducks
  6. Why not just apply resin to the cotton sail cloth and skip the fiberglass? Roger
  7. Welcome to MSW Bruce, Don’t be intimidated by scratch building. First of all your initial investment is low. You are not investing in an expensive kit. If things do not turn out to your liking you can scrap and do over. No need to get new parts from the kit manufacturer. Scratch building also allows you to select the building method that best fits your skills, building interests, and the hull form of the vessel that you have selected. The “industry standard” appears to be the plank on bulkhead double planked method but there are several other approaches from the carved hull to the plank on frame method. I personally like carving hulls from laminated lifts as I believe that it is easier to accurately reproduce hull shapes than laying planks over widely spaced bulkheads. I personally do not use CAD nor do I find it to be necessary. A skill that you will need to develop if you have not already done so is the ability to read a “lines drawing,” the Naval Architect’s system for depicting hull shape. This is not hard to do. Pick out a subject that interests you that is within the limits of your skill and equipment and don’t be afraid to do over something that you are not happy with. Take your time! Unlike household DIY activities like fixing the plumbing no one else should care about how long you take. Roger
  8. The black round object looks like a hockey puck. Is it? Roger
  9. Nice job Keith! Sometimes it’s remarkably difficult to sort out closely spaced waterlines. Have you considered plotting some diagonals to check fairness? Roger
  10. Chris, Welcome to MSW. Believe it or not, you can work around the time problem. When I was much younger with a challenging job, considerable business travel, and a young family I built several good models. I learned to work in short time periods- 1/2 to two hours. This also helped my workmanship as each time I restarted work I could assess my past efforts and make corrections as necessary. Unlike remodeling a bathroom nobody else is affected if the model sits unfinished on your workbench for a while. The main problem with this approach is losing interest over time, so pick a topic that will hold your interest. Roger
  11. Kurt, Thank you for your detailed information. My plan is to take a few figures with me on our annual trip to warmer climes. Otherwise I get anxious to get back home to my workshop. It would be best to use paint that I can buy there (southwest Florida), and it would appear that the Vallejo paints being formulated for brushing and readily available in big box craft stores might be the best bet. My airbrushing skills limit me to covering large surfaces- model ship hulls. Thanks again for your advice. Roger
  12. Kurt, I like to add a 54mm scale military figure to my 1:32 warship boat models and for my next model the figure that I have found will be plastic. Paints will be brush applied. As my wife has been complaining about the smell from paint solvents I plan to use acrylic paints. In the past I have used enamels. A couple of questions that perhaps you might answer: Can acrylics be applied directly over plastic or is a primer first required? Are model acrylic paints formulated to provide one coat coverage or it it necessary to build up several coats? Roger
  13. Chuck, For those of us with enquiring minds how about listing your sources, or if you already have can you point us to the post where you did. I know of only two examples where the horse is beneath the tiller- The “Medway” boat and the boat in the Kriegstein collection, and the Kriegsteins had their boat rigged after it came into their possession. The other well known example, the boat in May’s book shows the sheet horse passing over the tiller. Other aspects of this boat’s construction would indicate that it is an early design. Roger
  14. The Nautical Research Journal recently included an article about the launching flags for one of the models in the Naval Academy’s Rogers Collection. Roger
  15. I recommend the Proxxon pencil sander. Roger
  16. Or don’t paint it at all. The 1957 replica Mayflower at Plymouth Plantation has been criticized foe its elaborate paint scheme. Pigments that could not be manufactured from common earth elements were very expensive in the 1500’s and would be used sparingly if at all on a humble merchant ship. Bright pigments were used on warships of the period to increase the prestige of the King or Queen that owned the vessel. Eric Ronnberg has written an excellent article about historic paint pigments that was published in the Nautical Research Journal. It used to be on NRJ’s website. Roger
  17. It’s good to see you “back in the saddle again! Before you get to far along with your boat you might like to look at the ANCRE website. French ships boats had some distinctive features. Roger
  18. In his writings, Harold Hahn claimed that he used Nylon thread to rig his models. Some of his models such as the Colonial Schooner Diorama at the Mariners Museum ar now over 40 years old. I wonder how their rigging has held up. He also used surgical silk, not noted for its longevity. Roger
  19. Considering that ANCRE prides itself on producing historically accurate monographs of age of sail French shipbuilding I cannot understand why they include details, that differ from those for which accurate documentation exists as with the bow headrails and stern quarter carvings shown above. Any thoughts? Roger
  20. Not necessarily eBay but another related topic- buying books on the internet. In general I find internet book sale sites to be a boon for the ship modeler. You can usually find what you are looking for somewhere on virtually any maritime topic. You cannot find these at your local chain bookseller. I buy a lot of books and use Amazon as well as two Internet book sale sites; Alibris and AbeBooks. With one exception I have had excellent results. The exception- I recently found a usually expensive book that I was looking for on Alibris. The price was less than usual and just within the range that I was willing to pay. I bought it and was notified the next day that the shipper had sent the book but had not provided a tracking number. The book didn’t arrive. After it was overdue I emailed the store that had supposedly sent the book. I also looked up the store on Alibris’s website and found a flurry of complaints that the store reported shipping books that never arrived. Long story short, after many emails back and forth the store said that the book was lost in the mail (not likely) and if I would be patient they would find another copy to fill my order. After some not so subtle threats they refunded my money through Alibris. The moral of the story- This book seller seems to have a history of advertising via an internet book site expensive books at attractive prices they do not actually have in stock. Using the “lost in the mail” excuse they sit on your money. If a percentage of their customers don’t get as agressive as I did they come out ahead. I don’t know if they actually ever intended to fill the order but our local Post Office told me that now days they assign a tracking number to every package so the lack of one should have tipped me off right away. I should have also checked Alibris’ customer reviews for the store before ordering. Roger
  21. I have been considering the purchase of a set of Flexicut Micro Chisels. I have lost strength and muscle tissue in my hands and like their ergonomic shaped handles. Does anyone have any comments on the quality of Flexcut carving tools? Do they hold an edge? Roger
  22. My impression is that warship’s boats were not covered. Boats hung on davits were designated as “lifeboats” in the sense that they needed to be launched quickly in the event of a man overboard so removal of covers would interfere with this. Civil War era photos of boats stored on deck do not show covers. To check out my thesis I checked out several old Seamanship texts with the following results: Luce (digital copy on Naval history command website) no mention of boat covers. Brady, Kedge Anchor- Recommends boat covers be removed daily in tropical waters to ventilate boats. US Navy Ordinance Instructions 1866- Tables of standard boat equipment do not list boat covers as such. A tarpaulin is included to cover ammunition when boats are armed and a tent cover was available when boats were used foe expeditions. The drawing of this tent shows that it was intended to use the boat’s boom when rigged for sail as the tent’s ridgepost. So this is not a boat cover intended for storage. Keep in mind that most US Navy boats were carvel built, and would leak badly when dried out. Standing water in these boats was therefore not necessarily a bad thing. Boats, excluding captain’s gigs and admiral’s barges had little or no brightwork to protect from sunlight. And as the song goes, there were plenty of sailors, drunken or otherwise to bail them out. Like many ship model research topics, you’re the captain. If uncovered boats look unseamanlike, cover them. Roger
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