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Everything posted by Keith Black
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It makes perfect sense, Jay. I'm in the process of and a future battle looms with weathering and grunge work on my latest project. Fortunately the subject is such that it's pretty hard to do too much. I think it's a lot easier to weather subjects made at larger scales. Working at 1:120 it's real easy to get carried away.
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Eberhard, thank you for the great idea. The barge's current algae line is flat and vague. Having some volume however slight would help define the algae line as something other that just a painted line. At 1:120 I think bits of ground up foam would be too large and might appear too weighty but I like the idea a lot. I think sandpaper dust is too fine but the sawdust one gets from sawing may be varied enough in size to provide an acceptable alternative to foam at this scale. I'll give it a try and mix up some sawdust and PVA and see how it looks. Thank you again for the idea.
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mcb, thank you for the compliment and for your response regarding the weathering. This is my first time weathering so I'm leaning heavily on Eric, Eberhard, Glen, and you for your experience and expertise making the weathering convincing. I'm really looking forward to playing with the pastels once everything is built and attached,
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Glen, thank you for your response. If the barge were stationary then there would be higher more patchy growth. The barge was constantly being moved from the piling just driven to the next to be driven and once that job was completed it was hauled on to the next job. This is the algae line i'm trying to replicate. That was my thinking, Keith. I edited the second sentence in my post #105 from "The barge has her grunge and algae added" to "The barge has her deck's base grunge and algae added" I sincerely apologize for the confusion.
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That's so nice, Glen. The overall affect is very peaceful and relaxing.
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Eberhard, Keith, thank you very much for your responses. As I said in my reply to Eric, what's on the barge deck is a base. I want the whole to be assembled before the real weathering takes place. Please remember I'm attaching everything with CA. When I smear CA gel on the driver base and press it into the barge deck, I want it to stick with a vengeance. I'm a tad bit leery about trying to do that with pastels twixt the two. Am I making sense or have I gone completely wonky donkey? Hey, be gentle.
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Thank you very much for the response, Eric. Yes, the deck is monotone brown (trying to replicate mud and grime. I did try to make it darker around the tower, where the engine shed will be, and the path between the shed and the tower. I also made it darker around the four cleats. I left it lighter in the two side areas where there would have been less foot traffic. I recently received two weathering kits from Golden Artist Colors and I will use these on this project but I wanted to get a base down that I could add to once the everything was assembled. Yes, no?
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Bob, that right there is more important than all the ship models in the world. Congratulations!
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Thank you to everyone for lookin in and for the likes. The barge has her deck's base grunge and algae added. I still need to add poly just at the edge of the waterline to make the waterline edge look wet. I think this enough deck grunge, in fact ,it maybe too much? Please don't hesitate to offer up an opinion. I'm not looking for a pat on the back, I'm looking for honest assessments before moving forward as the barge treatment thus far is reversible. Once the driver is permanently attached then it's, it is what it is. The decks of the floating pile drivers was a mess. The photos show the decks littered with muck and debris so maybe this isn't too much? Algae added at the waterline. I'm not happy with the cleat weathering, that will get redone. No matter how the Donkey engine turns out, I'll be adding a engine shed as this is the most common configuration and it will add additional visual interest. I added a bit more grunge to the hull at the base and sides of the driver. Thank you to everyone for your comments and a huge thank you to everyone for your support by following along. Keith
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mcb @mcb was kind enough to send two more images of floating pile drivers. I treasure the four photos he has provided as they've aided me greatly in this build. "These pile drivers are DL&W RR marine department equipment. I think they are marked circa 1910. From the backgrounds the location appears to be Hoboken/ Jersey City on the Hudson. As were the last photos I sent these are from the Steamtown NHS Collection National Park Service. William B Barry jr. photographer."
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Thank you to everyone for the likes. Brian, thank you dropping in and I'd love to have you following along, looking over my shoulder and offering guidance when you see I'm about to go off the rails. Thank you, mcb. I don't know if the ferry was converted from steam but as photographed she is certainly propelled by a combustion engine. When I model the Lula for the tug she'll be steam driven and I'll put the boiler where the Model A's are parked. The barge doesn't look like a garbage scow, at least not yet. Her first coat of grunge is a darker brown color using a special stain I made up many years ago. I also used it on the driver so everything should tie together. Thank you guys for your support. Keith
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Thank you to everyone for the likes. Thank you, Roel. I'm anxious to complete the barge, driver, and Wonky Donkey but I need to get back to the Tennessee and at least complete up to the fore mast before diving in on building a tug for the pile driver. I posted this photo in an earlier post. I want the tug to be a variation of the below ferry. We could play spin the binnacle and let fate decide? Thank you, Eric. The barge has her first coat of grunge. Hopefully she doesn't wind up looking like a garbage scow. Thanks everybody for stopping by. Keith
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Glen, when it comes time to float my pile driver would you please come fill my pool? That's some nice looking water.
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Keith, I could have stuck the pile driver on this thing! Thank you, Tom. Thank you, Keith. About four years ago I thought I should try building a pile driver but at the time I was thinking a skid driver. As time passed and I became interested in workboats following the build logs of Gary, @FriedClams, mcb, @mcb, Brian, @mbp521, Eric, @Cathead, and Roel @Javelin the idea of building a floating pile drive seemed like a good little unique project.
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Thank you to everyone for the likes. Thank you, Gary. I wish Yorkshire blood flowed these ole veins and I would have loved listening to your Grandad's tales. Thank you, Rick. I got all the ascending level's deck boards installed. I also got the first layer of grunge on the tower. Pre grunge. Post grunge. The grunge is black acrylic craft paint applied thinly with a tiny Q-tip and rubbed in. Because the tower is still separate from the barge I went ahead and started the grunge process as it's easier to handle/rotate the tower separate from the barge. For clarity, the boiler is at the bow. I've made a mistake at the bottom of the port side vertical slide timber. There should be a cleaner patch near the bottom as the logs are pulled around and up from the port side as the log line sheave is on the port side of the head log. As logs are brought into the throat they would scrape the outside face of the port side vertical slide timber. It's easily corrected, a little spit on a Q-tip and voila. I've enjoyed looking at the barge deck/tower contrast but the barge deck is far from reality. The next photo posted of the barge, it will have a dark deck with grunge accents. The last thing to add to the tower before permanently attaching to the barge are the horizontal support pieces on the tower bow side that are also used as the ladder. You think 14 inch ratlines is a step, the pile driver plans call for 24 inches between each horizontal support. I may deviate from the plan and make the spacing more user friendly. Studying the photos that mcb @mcb provided not all the drivers adhered to the 24 inch spacing. Thank you guys so much for your support and being part of this little build. Keith
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Jay, great recovery work on the hull, it looks fantastic. Good to see your posts. I was a crew member on a 32 footer fishing salmon in Alaska's Bristol Bay, I also worked in the cannery as a carpenter sometimes doing simple repairs on some of the older wooden fishing boats. Captains/owners get older and seasons for them seem to get longer and more intense. They let one little thing go in the "I'll get to that during the next closure" but they don't and pretty soon their boats are riddled with needed repairs. Gary's @FriedClams Last Dollar is a perfect example.
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Yann, welcome to MSW. Glad to have you aboard.
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