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flying_dutchman2

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Posts posted by flying_dutchman2

  1. This is a fascinating topic and I have been reading this thoroughly. It also gives me a better understanding of it all (Thank you Jules).

    I use Witsen's manuscript and Hoving's book which is an interpretation of Witsen's manuscript plus several other books to attempt to either built another Fluit (First I need to finish the Zeehaen), or the war yacht, the Heemskerck. 

     

    Marcus

  2. @mangulator63

    "I'm just curious,  does anyone still sit at a drafting board and design and draw anymore?"

     

    Yes, I do. I still have my drafting table and Rotring pens (from 1978 when I studied landscape Architecture at the Horticulture College in the Netherlands) and still use them. My present built went from 1:75 to 1:37.5.  I have a fast pc with TurboCAD installed on it. But firing that up and scanning in the plans, blowing that up to twice the size, printing them all, and then taping that all together takes much longer then cutting a piece of velum from a 5 ft wide 100 ft long roll. Measure by hand the dimensions on the original plans and transcribe them on the 1:37.5.  

     

    Marc

  3. After reading with much interest, this has been very educational.

     

     

    Philemon1948

    "Is this true? Were drawings not used before they started building a ship in the seventeenth century?"

    The Dutch were well known for not putting anything on paper.  The master shipwright had it all in his head and they taught the younger shipwright and he taught it to the next on and so on. Nothing on paper so when you read through books lets say the book "17th Century Dutch Merchant Ships by Ab Hoving and Cor Emke" , drawings/plans are from paintings, edgings, maritime archeological excavations and contracts from Witsen and other authors.  Nothing like "we got plans from this and that.  Unlike other Western European nations that put everything on paper and some of this has survived to this day.

     

    This makes it more difficult for the present model ship builder to built a model because it never is exact. Reading through these 2 books I have mastered the art of reading and understanding contracts.  It did take several years and help from Ab Hoving.

     

    – A. Hoving, A. Lemmers, In tekening gebracht. De achttiende-eeuwse scheepsbouwers en hun ontwerpmetoden, 2001,
    – A. Hoving, Nicolaes Witsen and Shipbuilding in the Dutch Golden Age, 2012.

     

    I figured if I master understanding contracts I can built any Dutch Ship.

     

    Philemon1948

    "The flute and the pinas represent two different ship types although they tend to have many features in common".

    On the site of De VOCsite : Scheepstypen van de VOC  it discusses a "Hekboot", which is the best of both worlds. The bottom part of the ship is a Fluit and the top part is a Pinas.  Dutch quote "Het is een soort mengvorm met als onderschip de kenmerken van een fluit en de bovenbouw van een pinas".

     

    Just my 2 cents.

    Marcus

  4. As a frugal Dutchman, I have been making them for the last couple of years (I make almost everything myself, about 95%).

    I take a round dowel, clamp it, on a drill press put in 3 holes in a triangle. 

    Use my crude home made lathe and put the dowel in the chuck from the drill and use an abrassive cord to make the groove. 

    Cut off the deadeye a bit wider and sand both sides a bit round.

    As someone already said, if you only need a few, you can purchase them from any online store.

     

    Marcus

  5. @Meriadoc Brandybuck

    Large boat 18cm long x 6cm wide x 2cm high. Small boat 15cm long x 4.5cm wide x 2cm high.

    Planking on small boat 3mm wide x 1mm thick. On large boat 4mm wide x 1mm thick. 

     

    The spilling is difficult on these boats. But I am trying that. 

     

    Covering the boats with canvas is an option but then everything is hidden and wasn't really done around that time. 

     

    Marcus 

  6. Thanks for all the likes, suggestions and comments.  

     

    Between the little vacations, the flower and the edible garden I find time to work on the small boats. I have the most difficulties with the smaller boat. The shape is a tough one. I decided to build both boats with 2 layers of planking as I made many mistakes planking the small one. (I don't know how people work in scales of 200 and up, mind boggling). 

    699080168_440FluitZeehaen2smallboats.thumb.jpg.ef5b16706f3ad4d5561283bd6ac59d68.jpg

    1250310411_441FluitZeehaen2smallboats.thumb.jpg.471b4ca800ef6c6222f5d050218237ec.jpg

    417785594_442FluitZeehaen2smallboats.thumb.jpg.2581ea591a61ce46581eaec9f7d97cee.jpg

    1600083817_444FluitZeehaen2smallboats.thumb.jpg.80060677ebc6a8c1a21d01fe16e9d23d.jpg1498830822_443FluitZeehaen2smallboats.thumb.jpg.880b8c7752f4fef7f9d3a18831d58ac6.jpg

    Both have the first layer of planking completed and have started on the second layer which should hide the mistakes I made on the smaller boat. 

    46459493_445FluitZeehaen2smallboats.thumb.jpg.71c0dbe2bc49d67d63ff175678600761.jpg

    It is good that the smaller boat goes into the bigger boat and when I add 2 masts, 4 sails and the rigging you don't see much of the smaller boat. I am not sure if I am going to add the mast, sails and rigging to the boats. This may look like someone left a pile of junk on the deck and forgot to clean up. 

     

    What are the suggestions? 

     

    Marcus

  7. I purchase most of my K&S strips of brass and copper which are wider than 1/2" or get the 4" wide sheets. They are always in stock somewhere and reasonably priced. 

     

    When I just need one or two thin and narrow strip of brass I dont use the tablesaw. Instead I cut it with a #2 Xacto blade. This is what I do.

     

    I get a sheet which has the thickness I need for the project. 

    Then I measure the width I need and do that several times just to make sure. I use a pencil and draw a line so I know the width. 

    I clamp a metal ruler where the edge of the ruler is on the pencil line.

    (I clamp everything to the edge of the table). 

    I insert a new #2 Xacto blade in the holder, and press on the blade and slowly cut the metal from left to right and right to left. 

    This process is slow going but it works and the thin strip does not curl. 

     

    Marcus

  8. 2 small boats.
    I have tried out several methods as well as what is described in the book of Mondfeld. I saw on the Dutch modelbouwforum.nl a method that I am using. It has been challenging. Lots of trail and errors.  I find it about as difficult as building the hull of the model itself.

     

    618393452_430FluitZeehaen2smallboats.thumb.jpg.d858e5d8529ad5f37f019f569918385d.jpg

     

    621027571_431FluitZeehaen2smallboats.thumb.jpg.7d5a086cd7573202b6ad18855e99d8aa.jpg

     

    21135756_432FluitZeehaen2smallboats.thumb.jpg.9dd8142357cb6e9ee5f083fda47bcc0d.jpg

     

    469518522_433FluitZeehaen2smallboats.thumb.jpg.a4a8fd4708fda8773b1d9928c47f58f7.jpg

     

    1071431807_434FluitZeehaen2smallboats.thumb.jpg.3310402370c8c4f7527af11f4ffa7391.jpg

     

    1596004123_435FluitZeehaen2smallboats.thumb.jpg.85798a0cd5389ee38f4d6dbdb0fa8a0f.jpg

     

    303479482_436FluitZeehaen2smallboats.thumb.jpg.886a4331668f76e51f7c2d1a5c8921fd.jpg

     

    2107657481_437FluitZeehaen2smallboats.thumb.jpg.5451d571ed0371a4fe26ac92a38f0b2b.jpg

     

    249702670_438FluitZeehaen2smallboats.thumb.jpg.568d143461b8012a06192aae470e80f5.jpg

     


    My woodworkers club had reps. from Diablo and Freud. The Diablo rep showed us a new type of sanding technology. It is a net made of a ceramic blend and does not clog or tear. It lasts longer that regular sandpaper and made in Switzerland.
    Personally, it works great, better than anything I have used before. The 220 grit I use feels like the 100 grit regular sandpaper.

     

    SandNet.thumb.jpg.97fd99bebd8ad738b33c751835ff33fb.jpg

     

    Marcus 

  9. Thanks for all the likes, suggestions and comments. 

    Now that my wife has retired I have less time to work on the Fluit. Went on vacation to Bonaire, Netherlands Antilles. Snorkeling, sailing and checking out the island. There is only one shipwreck, the Dutch Brigantine Sirene from 1831.

    1045595615_1BrigantineSirene1831.thumb.jpg.3e77a99bec898f94053bb9ffee071776.jpg

     

    227766919_2BrigantineSirene1831.thumb.jpg.763f7735608324ad2e92942c8cfd2921.jpg

     

    86138623_3BrigantineSirene1831.thumb.jpg.c75013ccfae7073c55e6413cfbc6cba3.jpg

    We are doing a major house cleaning and donating many items to Salvation Army, Goodwill, etc.

    I worked on the deadeyes and the necessary iron work that goes with it. The tape with the lines under the wale show the angle of the iron work.

    867079479_422FluitZeehaendeadeyes.thumb.jpg.2be567813b21ca93302424a2503c11ed.jpg

     

    1419334160_423FluitZeehaendeadeyes.thumb.jpg.1ebef36002c1ce0493a7e01096d739c1.jpg

     

    1848030224_424FluitZeehaendeadeyes.thumb.jpg.50ce412a4cb9dedc569704154c1f0a26.jpg

     

    982468492_425FluitZeehaendeadeyes.thumb.jpg.676b1141054867125f869d756e5cf209.jpg

     

    1252736089_426FluitZeehaendeadeyes.thumb.jpg.6268247735e5a6f2f9c022b6e6d42ca0.jpg

     

    694708967_427FluitZeehaendeadeyes.thumb.jpg.06bfdbd1fd0146351011c07082c37827.jpg

     

    Marcus

  10. Check the following sites. It is where I get narrow brass strips. I go to K&S Metal site and check the SKU number of what i need. Than you can either do a Google search with that number and manufacturer. Example: "Flat Bars Brass 2Pcs 1/64 x 3/32, sku 815021"

    Or go to the below sites and compare prices. 

     

    hobbylinc.com

    onlinemetals.com

    zoro.com

    micromark.com

     

    Marcus 

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