mdulaney
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Posts posted by mdulaney
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The booklet says the boat was purchased in NYC and hadn't been built as a Navy boat.
One thing I have to watch out for is I am familiar with a more modern steam plant, and will need to do my research to be sure I don't do things that are too new.
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- Ryland Craze and GrandpaPhil
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I haven't built a ship model of any sort in a number of years, and I want to get back into the game, so to speak. The last several I built were scratch, but I decided to get a kit with some thought in the direction of easing back into the skills required (also, I don't really have a stock of scratchbuilding supplies like I used to). This kit happened to be on Ebay for a reasonable price, and fits in with my interests.
I have no comment on the hull; considering the lack of information on the prototype, I will build the hull as per instructions (more or less).
The steam plant, however, is another story. Once again, there is a lack of prototype information, but the way the plant is depicted has a few issues I can see right off. For example, the valve handles look modern to my eyes, and I'll need to research them further. I'm also fairly confident that the main steam line would have been lagged. We'll see what I come up with.- GrandpaPhil and Ryland Craze
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They have many uses, but mostly as stanchions for hand rails and the like. The idea is to fit .008" bronze wire.
- Canute, thibaultron and mtaylor
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Yeah, I've used PPD for things before; it just would have been easier to click 'add to cart' and then 'checkout', or, I was trying to be lazy
- mtaylor, Canute and thibaultron
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Does anyone make etched eyes? I'm looking for very small ones, with an ID of the eye itself around .009, .010 inch.
- Canute and thibaultron
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Well, she's entering her 97th year. She's the last of the Puget Sound steamers, and still has her original engine. She was built by Matt Anderson in his backyard for West Pass Transportation Company. She did the Seattle-Vashon Island-Tacoma run for eighteen years, before being taken down to run on the Columbia for a year. From then until around 1980 she worked as a charter vessel, then becoming a museum ship.
The engine is older than the ship. The engine is triple expansion and was built in 1904 by Heffernan Engine Works of Seattle. It was originally installed in a vessel known as the Tyrus, which, when bought by WPTCo., was renamed Virginia IV.
We still go out; made over 70 trips last year.
I guess, from here, what do you want to know? I can tell you in detail how to bring the plant up, but just be warned that I am not a very exciting writer.
The photos are the 1922 maiden voyage, 1935, a week ago (with my cell phone as I didn't have any other camera), and me fighting with the vacuum pump.
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- Canute, druxey, John Allen and 1 other
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- Canute and John Allen
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On 1/11/2018 at 10:42 AM, colinmaclock said:
Hi Michael, Yes, this was the TEV Princess Marguerite. The restoration required taking nearly all the super structure off and start from there. It was an unfinished model to begin with so it made that part easier. It had no details like stanchions, railings, rigging and anchors etc. plus the davits and lifeboats needed overhauling. The fenestration needed framing and all areas of the hull and decks required repainting and refinishing. The model was 5' 6'' in length and built with yellow cedar strip on frame and considered a primitive, although a high end primitive. The chap who originally built it was an engineer on the original Princess Marguerite that was torpedoed off Malta in the 2nd WW and was a chief engineer on the Marguerite II.
As it happens, a few of the windows survive and I have access to them, if you need measurements.
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Hey, thanks much, that's very helpful!.
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Is there a close match to Humbrol 31 (slate gray) that comes in a larger quantity and is easier to get in the US?
Picket Boat #1 by mdulaney - Model Shipways - Scale 1:24
in - Kit build logs for subjects built from 1851 - 1900
Posted
I've actually made some progress; however, not long after doing this work, I came down with an aweful sickness (not covid) and have been bedridden the last two weeks.