Jump to content

Timmo

Members
  • Posts

    602
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Timmo

  1. A diversion here-

    That trip to collect my grandfather's stock of timber netted more than expected. Most of it is rimu which has a lovely warm red glow for the heart timber sort of like pear for those in the northern hemisphere. There's also some outer stock with a lighter colour. The grain might not be tight enough for smaller pieces of ship fittings but I'll be keen to try to work some in somewhere in future builds.

    My father will be kept in woodwork for many years to come with that pile.

     

    post-271-0-46599800-1411458937_thumb.jpg

     

    Also while on the trip I uncovered a forebear of mine was also a ship modeller.

    A copy of a newspaper clipping , date unclear, of my great grandfather in his later years with one of his efforts.

    post-271-0-59433900-1411459047_thumb.jpg

  2. Work continues on the masts. The mizzen was done first and was fairly straight forward. I rather enjoy filing square and octagonal sections now.

    The mizzen is 5mm dowel but it's just a shade under in width. I considered changing it for something slightly larger as it just looks thin but will stick with it after checking with AOTS and realising there's only .2mm in it.

    A couple of the top mast caps are supplied in two parts to join around the mast tops but I've made one from offcut timber and will continue with the rest.

     

    post-271-0-24520500-1411455112_thumb.jpg

    post-271-0-63017200-1411455159_thumb.jpg

  3. Steadily working my way through the yards at present and the lathe is going well on a beautiful spring day with a modelling set up on the deck outside.

    post-271-0-68635100-1410062505_thumb.jpg

    Here's a couple of minutes' work that shows what the future could hold with such a weapon in my arsenal....

    post-271-0-00648300-1410062578_thumb.jpg

    Some of the kit dowel has warped over the 2 years since I opened the box. Not caldercraft's fault but mine for leaving it in the uninsulated garage. The constant changes in humidity and temperature have done this and taught me a lesson. Some new dowel on the way for the masts and the yards are mainly short enough not to be much affected.

    This is what the mizzen should be turned from... I don't think so.

     

    post-271-0-08246200-1410062875_thumb.jpg

     

    On another note I've thrown my lot in with ship modelling for good now with all my old plastic modelling mags, kits and books now for sale. I'm divesting my plastic portfolio in favour of ships, woodworking tools and obscure timbers.

    Speaking of which my father and I are heading down the line in a few weeks to pick up a family stash of timber that belonged to my grandfather. He was a bushman (forester/lumberjack to our northern hemisphere friends) that worked in the central plateau area of NZ pre-and just after the war and operated a fairly large sawmill. In his retirement years he was an avid woodworker and turner and I have memories of him up to his ankles in sawdust and shavings as he turned a great pile of timber collected over the years into all sorts of things.

    There's a bit of that timber that remains at the old family home and with the elderly aunt that inherited that place now also passed on it's just sitting about waiting to be used.

    I'm unsure how much is left and in what condition but there should be rimu, kauri, matai, maire, species of beech and possibly kahikatea there. These native timbers haven't been able to be commercially felled for decades so it's a bit of a potential treasure trove that is in danger of becoming firewood. Many have grains and a softness better suited to larger purposes than shipbuilding but the rimu and kauri especially I hope might find a home in some future projects as deck fittings or even slipway stocks to keep the family woodworking tradition alive.

  4. Hi, I've been a long time fan of this build and hope to head down the scratch build path one day, probably with homemade tools like a thickness sander and table saw.

    A question on the table saw - is the dremel mounted directly to the underside of the table or is it a flexibility-shaft attachment mounted there? I'm wondering how to get the clearance with a wide bodied dremel under there.

  5. Quite pleased withe the square section on the end of the bowsprit.

    post-271-0-98009800-1408347054_thumb.jpg

    But- spot the problem.

    post-271-0-99751800-1408347116_thumb.jpg

    I've cut the angle on the wrong side. It's pointing to the side rather than vertically. Doh.

    The connecting end was refitted with a piece of dowel and cut again to fit the sprit holder. This is all under the foc'sle so it won't be seen. More care needed.

    post-271-0-18836700-1408347270_thumb.jpg

    post-271-0-08844600-1408347308_thumb.jpg

     

    I'm not too flash with filing octagonal sections, of which there's a lot from here on in. More practice needed.

  6. A new toy has arrived in the workshop. A proxxon db250 lathe. I got it from TBS Aachen which is very good for price even with shipping from Germany to NZ. It's even cheap enough that it didn't attract any tax or duty coming in.

    It arrived on a weekday morning 15minutes before I had to shuffle the kids out of the house to school and myself to work but still enough time for a quick play. My retired father has been making use of it all week but now it's my turn.

    Now there's time for a better look...

    I'm not that good at getting dowel centred but have turned some nice ensign staves and here is the bowsprit on the chuck. Practice makes close enough to perfect. It's a lot easier than holding it in an electric drill.

    post-271-0-74313000-1408169107_thumb.jpg

    post-271-0-12470000-1408169271_thumb.jpg

  7. The tiller is the most obvious missing piece of deck fitting.

    The housing was made up from the kit parts with a decorative square cut in each face.

    post-271-0-15124500-1407661800_thumb.jpg

    The tiller bar was tapered in the dremel and bent according to the kit instructions. It's a bit of an angular bend and a check with the NMM museum shows a more fluid bend which was copied.

    post-271-0-62240100-1407661978_thumb.jpg

    post-271-0-39255300-1407661999_thumb.jpg

    An end 'knob' was turned on the dremel from a bit of spare 2mm yard dowel.

    post-271-0-98740100-1407662047_thumb.jpg

    And the finished result. Some thread was added as a concession to the helmsman who would presumably want some added grip.

    post-271-0-98881000-1407662103_thumb.jpg

  8. The quarterdeck barricade assembled and fitted, no deviation from the kit here. The horizontal rails have some very helpful locating holes pre drilled through them at the points where columns fit. This helped with stability as brass rod was used to pin e various parts together.

    post-271-0-62247500-1405474346_thumb.jpg

     

    The ladder sides are made of walnut ply and are both over scale thickness and show the laminate lines.

    The ladders were made up and then had the sides thinned down with a disc sander. A thin strip of walnut was added as a veneer over the sides and face. One side was done at a time as they become quite fragile when thinned down so much.

     

    Ladders as kit provided.

    post-271-0-60605600-1405474559_thumb.jpg

    One side thinned ( upper)

    post-271-0-20254400-1405474603_thumb.jpg

×
×
  • Create New...