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noel_colledge

NRG Member
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Everything posted by noel_colledge

  1. Hi Hyw. You mention 5 of your favourite ships you wish to build, what other 3 masterpieces can we look forward to seeing in the future. Regards Noel
  2. The accuracy of your mitres and joinery at this scale is incredible. It can be so unforgiving. Great work.
  3. Hi John. I have a full set of these and could scan the articles and email them if any good to you. If you PM me your email address and give me a few days to organise, I can get them over. Regards Noel
  4. What an absolutely fantastic project and finish, very original and educational throughout. Thank you for sharing, very inspirational You should be very proud
  5. Might be a bit obvious, but if the boat is for sale with a broker would it be worth dropping them an email to ask them directly. You might get cold shouldered but you never know..
  6. The turning mentioned by Bedford is called involuted turning. The idea is to take 4 square and numbered pieces of timber. Glue a piece of paper between the mating faces, making a larger square. You then turn the required design. Once complete you separate the pieces and glue back together so the design is now on the inside. You can now turn the external design of the item. Important to go with the grain in order to ensure on invisible join.
  7. Rutland do a version of it. Here is the link for you. Great to help out a fellow Yam Yam Regards Noel https://www.rutlands.co.uk/sp+woodworking-tilting-angle-vice-100mm+DK7104?tyah=y
  8. Druxey, if you put the finish on a lint free cloth first and then apply this to the work, you get no splash regardless of the speed.
  9. Only time I have wished I lived closer to Sussex, would love to observe you making something like this first hand. inspiring Keith, thank you. Noel
  10. There may be one relevant information on Vanhorn's document Eighteenth Century Colonian American Merchant Ship Construction on the following site https://nautarch.tamu.edu/academic/alum.htm My apologies if if is the wrong era for you. Regards Noel
  11. Your work never ceases to amaze me Johann. Thank you for the video, it pulls your progress together so far perfectly.
  12. Although I can't disagree with you about your comments on apprenticeships Mark, I also think that necessity is the mother of invention. Too many times when asked why something is done the way it is, they answer is Because that's the way it has always been done. Sometimes a different approach is all that is needed to improve a process, there are lots of different skills on this forum which makes the sharing of knowledge possible. After all an apprenticeship with one master does not mean that another will do it the same way, but the end result can be the same. We can see this by all the different ship build methods in a particular era by different yards or countries to achieve the same results. So long as you learn by mistakes the apprentice eventually becomes the master regardless of the approach.
  13. Hi Mark They are called Japanese bar clamps. Very useful for loads of operations. Love this build, Thanks for your insight. Regards Noel
  14. The trick is relearning how to saw again. Western saws definitely need a different approach to Eastern saws No pressure is certainly the tactic, let the saw do the work. Start off on the right and square line and stick to it. They don't like changing course part way through. One of the hardest parts I had to relearn was to fight the years of muscle memory pushing a saw with tension which is a certain way to damage any of these pull saws and easy to fall back into once you get into the rhythm
  15. I love your videos Kudin. Thank you for sharing your build tips. I look forward to learning more from you. Glad to see your little furry friend keeps you in line and focused on the job. Noel.
  16. I have often thought about looking at dog grooming tables which are height adjustable and suitable for larger dogs in excess of 60kg. Has anyone gone down this route and discovered any issues?
  17. I have had the same issue with LOS. I moved with the same components to Brass black from birchwood casey for use on guns and no problems, black as you like.
  18. Not sure if it is any use to you at all and even less sure of how to, and even if I am allowed to mention or post and upload. I was lucky enough recently to pick up a number of old nautical research journals from flea bay which I am steadily reading through. There is an article in vol 14 nos 3-4 (1967) about the building of a 1/4" scale Boeier by Harry V Dunn Jr. More than happy to copy and send PM or upload if the site allows.
  19. Were the carvings done on a professional CNC set up, if not what program and mill has been used?
  20. They also do a round handle SF1 to SF4 depending on the length you want, which makes them a little easier to use than the standard handle if it helps.
  21. Just a thought if it helps I can send you some photos I took when I visited last year, not sure how much use they will be for you
  22. Have you tried the Sydney Maritime Museum, they have a full size replica there, might be able to help you out
  23. Seeing them side by side you can clearly spot the differences and improvements, but I bet there will still be a list of people queuing up on this site to take your reject off your hands.
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