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shipmodel

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  1. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from popash42 in Queen Anne's Revenge 1710 by shipmodel - FINISHED - 1/36 scale   
    Hello again. 
     
    I trust that everyone has recovered from Thanksgiving, Hanukkah, and all that tryptophan in the turkey.  Not to mention all the family that may have descended on you as they did to us.  I have a greater appreciation than ever for the wit and wisdom of Winston Churchill. . .
     
    I did manage to get in some work on the hull.  The lower portion of the first hull was fully shaped using templates as usual.  The aft portion of the gun deck was built up with tapered stacks of basswood to match the rise of the sheer line, then sanded down to make a smooth curved surface at the centerline.  A camber (round-up) of the deck of 1/8" from the centerline to the bulwark edge was plotted from the plans.  I marked and sanded this into the gun deck surface.  When I was happy with the underwater shape and the deck curves, the hull was given its first coat of sandable primer.  Rough areas, uneven curves, and other problem spots were dealt with and re-primed.
     
    Although the hull will probably be tweaked some more, I started working out the bulwarks and hull sides above the gun deck.  Here you can see that the main bulwarks have been cut from 1/4" basswood to the shape taken from the NMM draught.  From the transom and taffrail to a point just aft of the forecastle the ship's sides were a consistently flat shape.  There will be some curves sanded into them later, and they will be bent to match the perimeter of the deck, but for the internal support, the basswood pieces are more than adequate.
     

     
    At this point they are still flat and straight.  They sit with a tumblehome of 13 degrees using the blocks and clamps to get and idea of what they will look like and how they will fit.
     
    Here I am cutting the rabbet that the bulwarks will sit in.  Since I do not have a router, I cut the horizontal channel using the Dremel grinding disc.  I have the large circular saw blade, but the thought of freehanding the cut with the agressive teeth was a little too scary.  It took a good deal longer, but if I had slipped I figured that all I would get would be a sanding injury, not an opened vein.
     
    Once the horizontal channel was ground, I used a wood chisel to make the vertical cuts that removed wood and established the rabbet.  It was cleaned up with sanding blocks, then the inside face was angled to match the tumblehome.
     

     
    Back in Brooklyn I returned to the masts.  Here are the two topmast blanks.  As shown on the plans, the mast shaft is offset towards the aft edge of the square heel.  In the photo you can see that I used the Preac to cut down the forward face of the square blank. 
     

     
    At the heel you can see it more clearly.
     

     
    The port and starboard faces of the stick were cut down half the amount that the forward face was, which squared up the stick again.  Now I could mark it out, cut the tenon with the table saw, then plane it octagonal as was done with the lower mast.
     

     
    The square stick was shaped to a cylinder.  Then the upper and lower edges of the wider section that holds up the trestletrees was cut on the table saw.  I whittled the wood down till it matched the cut channels.  Then the balance of the wood was removed with sanding drums, sanding sticks and sandpaper.
     


     
    At the heel you can see the construction sequence clearly.  The three sides are reduced with the table saw, then shaped with the sanding drum to fair the offset round shaft to the square heel.
     

     
    Once the heel is shaped, a fid hole is drilled through and squared up with a needle file.  Two mock sheaves are drilled and shaped on an angle that ultimately lines up with eyebolts on the cap.  These are for the leads of the lifting ropes.  The completely shaped topmasts were give a coat of finish and set aside.
     

     
    The mast caps were shaped from the plans from pear.  They have the Continental humped form, with holes and grooves along the edges of the cap for the lifting ropes.  They were made from a forward and aft piece, with a notched seam held together with iron straps.  Straps also crossed the bottom, fore and aft faces of the cap.  Here is the blank with the hole for the topmast drilled.  The other has been shaped and the seam between the forward and aft pieces scribed as before.  The piece was finished and the straps glued on.
     

     
    The straps were drilled for 0.020" iron wire pins.  These were inserted and cut off long before being glued.  Once the glue dried they were cut almost flat, then peened smooth.
     

     
    Four eyebolts were drilled and mounted on the underside of the cap through the supporting straps and the caps were complete.
     

     
    The topmast trestletrees were cut and shaped to match the plans.  The crosstrees were shaped from wider pieces of wood so they could splay out, then half-lapped into the trestletrees.  Holes for the shroud lines were drilled before they were tapered per the plans, then finished.
     

     
    The topmast cap was cut and shaped much like the lower caps, but these were one piece units with iron straps that could be opened when the topgallant mast was taken down.  This is useful, because the truck at the masthead won't fit through the opening without opening the strap.
     

     
    So here are all the components of both main masts.  The second topmast, the upper one in the photo, had a knot in it that took up the stain badly.  I will minimize it with a darker finish, but in the fullness of time it will be replaced and used as one of the spare spars that will fit along the open waist in the finished ship.
     

     
    Here they are all set up.  From the deck the mast reaches some 31 inches to the truck.  This is going to be one mother of a fully rigged model.
     

     
    There will probably be a longer break until my next post.  I will be building the foremasts, which are almost identical to the main masts, so no new techniques will be used.  I will be back when they are done.
     
    Happy Holidays to all.
     
    Dan
     
     
     
  2. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from avsjerome2003 in Queen Anne's Revenge 1710 by shipmodel - FINISHED - 1/36 scale   
    Hi Daniel -
     
    It really is just as simple as it sounds.  If you look at the plan for the bolster there is a zig-zag line dividing the forward and aft pieces that fit together.  Once I had the shape of the bolster cut and tapered, I drew on the line with a straightedge and a sharp pencil.  Then I went over the lines with the straightedge guiding the back (dull) side of a #10 blade, the curved one, not the pointed #11 blade.  I pushed down fairly hard to make a groove in the wood.  This would have made a visible line all by itself, but I find that doing this pushes the graphite from the pencil down into the groove, darkening it and making it stand out.
     
    I used this same technique on the teak bench seats for the Swan 42 model.  In the computer I drew the multiple wood pieces for the seats, the side-by-side planks and the perimeter framing.  Once it was done to my liking and sized to the model, I printed it out onto thin veneer.  It looked good, but when I scribed the lines the printer ink was driven into the grooves, making seams that in some indescribable way look much more realistic than the simple printed version.
     


     
    Anyway, it seems to work for me.  That's my story and I'm sticking to it.
     
    Dan
     
     
  3. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from CharlieZardoz in Queen Anne's Revenge 1710 by shipmodel - FINISHED - 1/36 scale   
    Hello again -
     
    Just back from the doctor, who says that a 'trigger finger' problem that I am having with my right thumb is related to the repetitive nature of the carving work.  He told me to lay off for a while, and gave me a cortisone shot into the base of the thumb.  Ouch !    And then it didn't work!  I don't have much more to do on the first figurehead, so I am going to finish it in easy stages, then work on some larger pieces before going back to the second lion.
     
    Here is a short report on where I am now -
     
    This next phase of the carving is mostly a process of refining the shapes that were defined last time.  For this I mostly use a series of diamond abrasive burrs of various shapes.  Here is the set, purchased from Micro-Mark some time ago when Chinese tool makers hadn't started taking short cuts with quality.  They have held up very well for more than a decade.  The long cone in the Dremel is very useful.  I use the point for lining out and small details, while the larger diameter of the base of the burr smooths and shapes larger surfaces.
     

     
    The carving process with these burrs is the same as for the larger bitts - I first define the edges and planes, then refine them by rounding the corners and adjusting the angles of the planes.  Raised body parts like the tail and upper arm are given some dimensionality by undercutting them slightly to create a shadow line.  
     
    All of the carving is all done by eye at this stage - the Michelangelo method - I just remove whatever doesn't look like the image in my head.  Here are a series of shots with the work rotating starboard to port.
     





     
    The major issue right now is the shape of the head.  It is still too broad.  In some photos it looks more like a lizard than a lion.  You can see that quite clearly in the first enlarged photo below.  This was taken with the macro setting on the camera, and some of the problem is exaggerated, but you can see what I mean.  In the lower photo I used Photoshop to narrow the image about 15%, and now it looks much more leonine.  I will carve it down to get that general shape.
     


     
    If you haven't figured it out, the teeth are created by simply drilling a series of small holes which define the negative space between the teeth.  I may use a small triangular file to refine them, or just leave them as is, since they are all but invisible uness a camera is used to magnify them. 
     
    Happy Thanksgiving to all.
     
    Dan
  4. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from CharlieZardoz in Queen Anne's Revenge 1710 by shipmodel - FINISHED - 1/36 scale   
    Hi all -
     
    Two days of carving and the first figurehead is rounding into shape.  Here is how I am going about it. 
     
    I do almost all of my carving with a rotary tool and a series of ever smaller burrs and bitts.  Here they are for the first stage of the carving.  It includes a 1/4" diameter sanding sleeve for the Dremel plus a set of Disston burrs. Over the years I have added to the set when I found other shapes that could be useful. 
     

     
    Here are the ones I use most often.  The sanding sleeve is at the top.  From left to right we have a straight bit with a rounded tip; a straight bit with a square tip; a reverse cone; and in the Dremel is a sharp cornered reverse rounded cone.  This last one is very useful for 'drawing' thin lines onto the wood that serve as landmarks for deeper carving with the other bitts.
     

     
    The first carving was done with the sanding sleeve to round off the square corners and planes left by the band saw, and to get the basic side to side shape.
     

     
    Now the arms are defined, which will fair into the basic shape of the lower body.  The mane is rounded, which will frame the shape of the face.
     

     
    The tail was pencilled in on both sides and defined, which then set the depth of the lower body.  The crown was detailed, which adjusts the top of the mane.  The mane was given its initial texture, which then required reducing the height of the shoulder, etc. etc.  This is how I carve, with each step or detail that is worked on leading to a further defining of the adjacent detail. 
     

     
    So here is the current look of the first figurehead.  The head is still too broad, but that is OK, as it gives me the depth of material that can be carved away for the final detailing of the face.
     


      
     
    Next time, the final detailing.
     
    Be well
     
    Dan
  5. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from popash42 in Queen Anne's Revenge 1710 by shipmodel - FINISHED - 1/36 scale   
    Hi all, and thanks for the comments and likes.
     
    The next set of independent pieces to be made were the three hatches with gratings.  One two-part one goes on the quarterdeck, while the other two go on the gun deck under the boat in the waist.  My method for making gratings is a bit unusual in that it there is little or no measuring done with a ruler or calipers.  Everything is done relative to the thickness of the saw blade that is used.  I developed this method because I only have a Preac saw.  A milling machine might make the whole process easier, but I work with what I have.
     
    The first thing is to set up the saw to make square section sticks of wood whose dimension will be about 2  inches in the scale being used.  This then has to  match the thickness of a saw blade that you have.  For the small grating I used a slitting saw blade that was 0.032” thick. 
     
    To set the saw I sandwiched that blade between a second blade and the rip fence.  The fence is snugged up and locked down.  The cutting blade does not have to be the same thickness, although in this case it was since I have two blades of that same thickness.
     
    [These first nine photos are in black and white because they are taken from another presentation on making much smaller gratings].
     

     
    Several sticks 0.032” square were cut from a sheet of hardwood.  Only a few are needed.  Then the blade that matches the sticks is mounted in the saw, if it is not already there.   Two of the sticks are sandwiched between the blade and the fence which is snugged tight and locked down.
     

     
    One stick is removed and a short section of the other is held firmly against the fence and tacked in place with extra thin cyano.  Care is taken to see that the fence is not glued to the table.
     

     
    The fence is removed, leaving a guide strip parallel to the blade and one blade thickness to the right. 
     

     
    A rectangular piece of hardwood sheet is selected and held against the guide strip and the miter guage.  The blade height is set up to cut just a tiny bit deeper than halfway through the sheet.
     

     
    The wood is run over the blade, cutting a channel one blade thickness from the end.
     

     
    The wood is flipped over and the slot that was just cut is placed on top of the guide strip. 
     

     
    The wood is run through again, cutting a second channel two thicknesses to the left of the first channel.
     

     
    The balance of the sheet is cut in the same way, making a series of channels parallel to each other and spaced two blade widths apart.
     

     
    Here is the grating sheet for the QAR. At my scale I needed sticks and channels that were about 0.055”.  I took one of the 0.032” blades and stacked it together with a 0.023” blade, making a 0.055” dado blade.
     

     
    Actually, for the small grating I used Portia Takakjian’s technique.  This involves cutting lots of square sticks as well as cutting cross channels across the first ones.  The cross channels are filled with the sticks and everything is glued together.  When dry the solid back of the sheet is ground off with a sanding drum.  This works well for a small grating, but the wider blade did not cut as cleanly so I kept getting tearout.  Also, I needed more than 25 square inches of grating and did not look forward to grinding off so much wood.
     
    Instead, I removed the guide strip and set the saw to cut 0.55” using the blades as spacers again.  Strips were parted off the sheet until the material was used up.  I call them toothed strips for obvious reasons.
     

     
    Three quarters of the toothed strips were cut into thirds and interlocked with the remaining long strips.
     

     
    This created a grating sheet about 2 ½ by 7 ½ inches.  This was only enough to make the gratings for one of the models, so a second grating sheet was made in the same way.
     

     
    From the sheets I cut out sections for the grating sizes that I needed, sanded the edges flush and gave them a coat of slightly darkened matte finish to protect them from glue stains when the coamings get built around them.
     

     
    Overall, this method worked well for me, and I will try it in smaller scales in the future.  A tip of the hat to Charlie Files, inventor of the Preac, wherever you are.
     
    I will have the log of making the coamings in a few days.  Until then, be well.
     
    Dan
     
     
  6. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from Archi in Queen Anne's Revenge 1710 by shipmodel - FINISHED - 1/36 scale   
    Hi all, and thanks for the comments and likes.
     
    The next set of independent pieces to be made were the three hatches with gratings.  One two-part one goes on the quarterdeck, while the other two go on the gun deck under the boat in the waist.  My method for making gratings is a bit unusual in that it there is little or no measuring done with a ruler or calipers.  Everything is done relative to the thickness of the saw blade that is used.  I developed this method because I only have a Preac saw.  A milling machine might make the whole process easier, but I work with what I have.
     
    The first thing is to set up the saw to make square section sticks of wood whose dimension will be about 2  inches in the scale being used.  This then has to  match the thickness of a saw blade that you have.  For the small grating I used a slitting saw blade that was 0.032” thick. 
     
    To set the saw I sandwiched that blade between a second blade and the rip fence.  The fence is snugged up and locked down.  The cutting blade does not have to be the same thickness, although in this case it was since I have two blades of that same thickness.
     
    [These first nine photos are in black and white because they are taken from another presentation on making much smaller gratings].
     

     
    Several sticks 0.032” square were cut from a sheet of hardwood.  Only a few are needed.  Then the blade that matches the sticks is mounted in the saw, if it is not already there.   Two of the sticks are sandwiched between the blade and the fence which is snugged tight and locked down.
     

     
    One stick is removed and a short section of the other is held firmly against the fence and tacked in place with extra thin cyano.  Care is taken to see that the fence is not glued to the table.
     

     
    The fence is removed, leaving a guide strip parallel to the blade and one blade thickness to the right. 
     

     
    A rectangular piece of hardwood sheet is selected and held against the guide strip and the miter guage.  The blade height is set up to cut just a tiny bit deeper than halfway through the sheet.
     

     
    The wood is run over the blade, cutting a channel one blade thickness from the end.
     

     
    The wood is flipped over and the slot that was just cut is placed on top of the guide strip. 
     

     
    The wood is run through again, cutting a second channel two thicknesses to the left of the first channel.
     

     
    The balance of the sheet is cut in the same way, making a series of channels parallel to each other and spaced two blade widths apart.
     

     
    Here is the grating sheet for the QAR. At my scale I needed sticks and channels that were about 0.055”.  I took one of the 0.032” blades and stacked it together with a 0.023” blade, making a 0.055” dado blade.
     

     
    Actually, for the small grating I used Portia Takakjian’s technique.  This involves cutting lots of square sticks as well as cutting cross channels across the first ones.  The cross channels are filled with the sticks and everything is glued together.  When dry the solid back of the sheet is ground off with a sanding drum.  This works well for a small grating, but the wider blade did not cut as cleanly so I kept getting tearout.  Also, I needed more than 25 square inches of grating and did not look forward to grinding off so much wood.
     
    Instead, I removed the guide strip and set the saw to cut 0.55” using the blades as spacers again.  Strips were parted off the sheet until the material was used up.  I call them toothed strips for obvious reasons.
     

     
    Three quarters of the toothed strips were cut into thirds and interlocked with the remaining long strips.
     

     
    This created a grating sheet about 2 ½ by 7 ½ inches.  This was only enough to make the gratings for one of the models, so a second grating sheet was made in the same way.
     

     
    From the sheets I cut out sections for the grating sizes that I needed, sanded the edges flush and gave them a coat of slightly darkened matte finish to protect them from glue stains when the coamings get built around them.
     

     
    Overall, this method worked well for me, and I will try it in smaller scales in the future.  A tip of the hat to Charlie Files, inventor of the Preac, wherever you are.
     
    I will have the log of making the coamings in a few days.  Until then, be well.
     
    Dan
     
     
  7. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from CiscoH in Queen Anne's Revenge 1710 by shipmodel - FINISHED - 1/36 scale   
    Hello and Happy New Year to all -
     
    This past month has been full of grandkids and holidays that got in the way of what is the most important thing in life - ship modeling
     
    I did manage to complete both sets of the masts, which are packed away until rigging time.  The fore
     

     
    The mizzen
     

     
    And the Bowsprit and jib boom
     

     
    Meanwhile, I have been studying the rigging diagrams and reading Anderson and others.  The first question came when I realized that some of the lines, including the halyards, run from the mastheads to belaying points on deck at the base of the mast.  To do this they have to pass through the platform of the top.  Budriot's plans and the tops that I made from them have no openings aft of the masthead. 
     

     
    I figured that I could solve this in one of two ways - I could simply drill some holes for the lead of the lines, or I could take apart the tops and remove some of the planking to make a larger opening, a much more complicated procedure.  I consulted with some knowledgable modelers including Rob Napier, and Bob Giles sent me some photographs of the tops of the St. George (1701) model at Annapolis. 
     

     
    I also looked at the photographs of the model of Le Sans-Pareil (1757) in the Musee de la Marine.  All of them agreed that removing the planking was the only way to go.  So, with some anxiety, I pried off the trestletrees and crosstrees from under each of the tops.  Fortunately they came away with only one slight greenstick fracture that was easily repaired.  The cleats were shortened, then I used a razor saw to cut through the plank aft of the lubber hole.  The enlarged opening was cleaned up with a blade and sandpaper before the trestletrees and crosstrees were cleaned up and re-attached.  Here they are.  
     

     
    Next, the gratings and coamings.  I have worked out a new way to do them which gives me better results in this larger scale.
     
    Be well
     
    Dan  
  8. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from popash42 in Queen Anne's Revenge 1710 by shipmodel - FINISHED - 1/36 scale   
    Hello and Happy New Year to all -
     
    This past month has been full of grandkids and holidays that got in the way of what is the most important thing in life - ship modeling
     
    I did manage to complete both sets of the masts, which are packed away until rigging time.  The fore
     

     
    The mizzen
     

     
    And the Bowsprit and jib boom
     

     
    Meanwhile, I have been studying the rigging diagrams and reading Anderson and others.  The first question came when I realized that some of the lines, including the halyards, run from the mastheads to belaying points on deck at the base of the mast.  To do this they have to pass through the platform of the top.  Budriot's plans and the tops that I made from them have no openings aft of the masthead. 
     

     
    I figured that I could solve this in one of two ways - I could simply drill some holes for the lead of the lines, or I could take apart the tops and remove some of the planking to make a larger opening, a much more complicated procedure.  I consulted with some knowledgable modelers including Rob Napier, and Bob Giles sent me some photographs of the tops of the St. George (1701) model at Annapolis. 
     

     
    I also looked at the photographs of the model of Le Sans-Pareil (1757) in the Musee de la Marine.  All of them agreed that removing the planking was the only way to go.  So, with some anxiety, I pried off the trestletrees and crosstrees from under each of the tops.  Fortunately they came away with only one slight greenstick fracture that was easily repaired.  The cleats were shortened, then I used a razor saw to cut through the plank aft of the lubber hole.  The enlarged opening was cleaned up with a blade and sandpaper before the trestletrees and crosstrees were cleaned up and re-attached.  Here they are.  
     

     
    Next, the gratings and coamings.  I have worked out a new way to do them which gives me better results in this larger scale.
     
    Be well
     
    Dan  
  9. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from aviaamator in Queen Anne's Revenge 1710 by shipmodel - FINISHED - 1/36 scale   
    Hello and Happy New Year to all -
     
    This past month has been full of grandkids and holidays that got in the way of what is the most important thing in life - ship modeling
     
    I did manage to complete both sets of the masts, which are packed away until rigging time.  The fore
     

     
    The mizzen
     

     
    And the Bowsprit and jib boom
     

     
    Meanwhile, I have been studying the rigging diagrams and reading Anderson and others.  The first question came when I realized that some of the lines, including the halyards, run from the mastheads to belaying points on deck at the base of the mast.  To do this they have to pass through the platform of the top.  Budriot's plans and the tops that I made from them have no openings aft of the masthead. 
     

     
    I figured that I could solve this in one of two ways - I could simply drill some holes for the lead of the lines, or I could take apart the tops and remove some of the planking to make a larger opening, a much more complicated procedure.  I consulted with some knowledgable modelers including Rob Napier, and Bob Giles sent me some photographs of the tops of the St. George (1701) model at Annapolis. 
     

     
    I also looked at the photographs of the model of Le Sans-Pareil (1757) in the Musee de la Marine.  All of them agreed that removing the planking was the only way to go.  So, with some anxiety, I pried off the trestletrees and crosstrees from under each of the tops.  Fortunately they came away with only one slight greenstick fracture that was easily repaired.  The cleats were shortened, then I used a razor saw to cut through the plank aft of the lubber hole.  The enlarged opening was cleaned up with a blade and sandpaper before the trestletrees and crosstrees were cleaned up and re-attached.  Here they are.  
     

     
    Next, the gratings and coamings.  I have worked out a new way to do them which gives me better results in this larger scale.
     
    Be well
     
    Dan  
  10. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from DORIS in Queen Anne's Revenge 1710 by shipmodel - FINISHED - 1/36 scale   
    Hello and Happy New Year to all -
     
    This past month has been full of grandkids and holidays that got in the way of what is the most important thing in life - ship modeling
     
    I did manage to complete both sets of the masts, which are packed away until rigging time.  The fore
     

     
    The mizzen
     

     
    And the Bowsprit and jib boom
     

     
    Meanwhile, I have been studying the rigging diagrams and reading Anderson and others.  The first question came when I realized that some of the lines, including the halyards, run from the mastheads to belaying points on deck at the base of the mast.  To do this they have to pass through the platform of the top.  Budriot's plans and the tops that I made from them have no openings aft of the masthead. 
     

     
    I figured that I could solve this in one of two ways - I could simply drill some holes for the lead of the lines, or I could take apart the tops and remove some of the planking to make a larger opening, a much more complicated procedure.  I consulted with some knowledgable modelers including Rob Napier, and Bob Giles sent me some photographs of the tops of the St. George (1701) model at Annapolis. 
     

     
    I also looked at the photographs of the model of Le Sans-Pareil (1757) in the Musee de la Marine.  All of them agreed that removing the planking was the only way to go.  So, with some anxiety, I pried off the trestletrees and crosstrees from under each of the tops.  Fortunately they came away with only one slight greenstick fracture that was easily repaired.  The cleats were shortened, then I used a razor saw to cut through the plank aft of the lubber hole.  The enlarged opening was cleaned up with a blade and sandpaper before the trestletrees and crosstrees were cleaned up and re-attached.  Here they are.  
     

     
    Next, the gratings and coamings.  I have worked out a new way to do them which gives me better results in this larger scale.
     
    Be well
     
    Dan  
  11. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from avsjerome2003 in Queen Anne's Revenge 1710 by shipmodel - FINISHED - 1/36 scale   
    Hello and Happy New Year to all -
     
    This past month has been full of grandkids and holidays that got in the way of what is the most important thing in life - ship modeling
     
    I did manage to complete both sets of the masts, which are packed away until rigging time.  The fore
     

     
    The mizzen
     

     
    And the Bowsprit and jib boom
     

     
    Meanwhile, I have been studying the rigging diagrams and reading Anderson and others.  The first question came when I realized that some of the lines, including the halyards, run from the mastheads to belaying points on deck at the base of the mast.  To do this they have to pass through the platform of the top.  Budriot's plans and the tops that I made from them have no openings aft of the masthead. 
     

     
    I figured that I could solve this in one of two ways - I could simply drill some holes for the lead of the lines, or I could take apart the tops and remove some of the planking to make a larger opening, a much more complicated procedure.  I consulted with some knowledgable modelers including Rob Napier, and Bob Giles sent me some photographs of the tops of the St. George (1701) model at Annapolis. 
     

     
    I also looked at the photographs of the model of Le Sans-Pareil (1757) in the Musee de la Marine.  All of them agreed that removing the planking was the only way to go.  So, with some anxiety, I pried off the trestletrees and crosstrees from under each of the tops.  Fortunately they came away with only one slight greenstick fracture that was easily repaired.  The cleats were shortened, then I used a razor saw to cut through the plank aft of the lubber hole.  The enlarged opening was cleaned up with a blade and sandpaper before the trestletrees and crosstrees were cleaned up and re-attached.  Here they are.  
     

     
    Next, the gratings and coamings.  I have worked out a new way to do them which gives me better results in this larger scale.
     
    Be well
     
    Dan  
  12. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from dgbot in Queen Anne's Revenge 1710 by shipmodel - FINISHED - 1/36 scale   
    Hello and Happy New Year to all -
     
    This past month has been full of grandkids and holidays that got in the way of what is the most important thing in life - ship modeling
     
    I did manage to complete both sets of the masts, which are packed away until rigging time.  The fore
     

     
    The mizzen
     

     
    And the Bowsprit and jib boom
     

     
    Meanwhile, I have been studying the rigging diagrams and reading Anderson and others.  The first question came when I realized that some of the lines, including the halyards, run from the mastheads to belaying points on deck at the base of the mast.  To do this they have to pass through the platform of the top.  Budriot's plans and the tops that I made from them have no openings aft of the masthead. 
     

     
    I figured that I could solve this in one of two ways - I could simply drill some holes for the lead of the lines, or I could take apart the tops and remove some of the planking to make a larger opening, a much more complicated procedure.  I consulted with some knowledgable modelers including Rob Napier, and Bob Giles sent me some photographs of the tops of the St. George (1701) model at Annapolis. 
     

     
    I also looked at the photographs of the model of Le Sans-Pareil (1757) in the Musee de la Marine.  All of them agreed that removing the planking was the only way to go.  So, with some anxiety, I pried off the trestletrees and crosstrees from under each of the tops.  Fortunately they came away with only one slight greenstick fracture that was easily repaired.  The cleats were shortened, then I used a razor saw to cut through the plank aft of the lubber hole.  The enlarged opening was cleaned up with a blade and sandpaper before the trestletrees and crosstrees were cleaned up and re-attached.  Here they are.  
     

     
    Next, the gratings and coamings.  I have worked out a new way to do them which gives me better results in this larger scale.
     
    Be well
     
    Dan  
  13. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from popash42 in Queen Anne's Revenge 1710 by shipmodel - FINISHED - 1/36 scale   
    Hi all - thanks for looking in.
     
    Another week, another report.  The hulls are not going as well as could be hoped, so here is another deour.
     
    To go with the tops that were built last time, I am now making the masts.  I took a plank of rock maple and cut it down to the dimensions of the masts and spars that I measured from the Budriot plans.  They are cut as square sticks sized to the largest width of the ultimate mast or spar, then cut to length.  As long as I was cutting, I cut duplicates for the two models.  Here are most of them, from the 5/8” x 19” of the main mast, down to the 3/16” x  6” of the main stunsail boom.
     

     
    These were all cut on a Hegner Mk 4 multi-tool.   It is a mid-sized tool that fits between the Preac and a full sized table saw, and is perfect for the size of the QAR models.  It has a table saw, router, disc sander, and a Jacobs chuck that can power a flexible shaft grinding tool or an add-on lathe unit.  I picked it up used and it came without an instruction manual, but I am figuring it out as I go.
     

     
    After all of the pieces were cut, I turned first to the main mast.  It is a fairly simple tapered cylinder.  I planned to use the lathe on the Hegner, but it will only take 12” work pieces, not the 19” of the mast.  Without access to a larger one I went back to basics to carve the mast.
     
    The first step was to cut the tenon for the mast cap while the blank was still square.  The blade height and rip fence were adjusted on the table saw and the tenon was quickly cut out on all four faces.  Then the blank was made octagonal.  This was done in the usual way by marking out the 2-3-2 divisions down the length of the blank with a dividers.  With a sharp block plane the corners were taken down to the lines, resulting in the eight sided stick on the right.
     

     
    After the corners were marked up as sight guides, they were taken down and rounded with a coarse disc in a hand-held random orbit sander.  I didn't find it difficult to do this, since it only had to be accurate enough for a first approximation.  I paused frequently to mark up any high spots that I felt when I spun the blank between my fingers.  Then they were sanded down and the process was repeated till it felt round.
     

     
    Once the round blank was achieved I went to the plans and determined that the diameter just under the cap was 7/16”.  This was marked onto the top of the mast using a circle guide.  Using a coarse sanding drum in the Dremel I took the mast down to that size in a sharp taper right at the top.  I would pull the drum towards me, grinding off a thin slice from the mast, then rotate the blank a little and repeat.  One corner of the top tenon was marked so I would not forget to make a complete circle before checking my progress.
     

     
    From there I moved down the length of the blank: grinding a strip with the dremel and turning the blank a little bit, grinding and turning, grinding and turning.  In essence, I became a very slow lathe.  After doing this for a while I would smooth out any humps and hollows that developed by sanding the blank on a sheet of sandpaper which has been glued to a piece of plexiglass laid flat of the workbench. 
     

     
    This process would have taken much longer if the mast had a straight taper from base to cap.  However, the plans had these two little beehive drawings which had to be the tapering diagrams.  They were only designated ‘a’ and ‘b’, but after comparing them to the plans I determined that the one on the left fits the three lower masts, while the one on the right fits only the bowsprit.
     

     
    This tapering process continued for what seemed like a very long time until I could slide the mast up through the top with the masthead extending above the top as indicated on the plans.
     

     
    Now the pieces to support the crosstrees and top were made.  Unlike English practice, there are no hounds, cheeks or bibs.  Instead, the French at the time used only a front fish that fit to the mast and slid up between the crosstrees.  A two-part bolster was fitted to each side and treenailed to the mast and to the front fish.  Here are the plans.
     

     
    The fish was made out of pear and treenailed to the mast with walnut dowels for contrast.  The fish is also held in place by a pair of wooldings that lie in broad grooves carved into the face of the piece.
     

     
    The bolsters are also pear and treenailed with walnut.  The only technical point here is that it was made in one piece, not two.  The staggered separation line was drawn on in pencil, then the back of a #11 blade was used to scribe the lines, which tattoos the pencil marks into the wood.
     

     
    The mast is reinforced by alternating iron mast bands and wooldings.  The bands are made from 1/16” wide brass strips which are wrapped around the mast and sized to fit, then chemically blackened.  They are attached temporarily with glue before holes are drilled for metal pins.  Each end of the strip where they meet gets one, and a third is placed on the opposite side of the mast.    The pins are annealed iron wire which is inserted, glued, and clipped short before being peened smooth.  You can see one on the band near the bottom end of the front fish and another just below the light reflection on the other band.
     
    Working in a large scale like 1/36 will allow me to build some details much as they are made in full sized practice.  The wooldings are a case in point.  A cherry strip was cut, soaked and bent around the mast before being glued in place.  3” rope (1” diameter) is wrapped 13 turns around the mast, packed tightly against the wood strip, and cinched tight.  A second cherry strip is added to the other side of the wrapping.  A painting of dilute PVA glue secures everything.  Once the glue is dry, everything was given a coat of the finish and rubbed down.
     

     
    The top was fit back on the masthead to see that everything fit properly.  The inset shows how the front fish comes up to the level of the top of the crosstrees and takes the place of the spacer that, in English practice, separates the masthead from the heel of the topmast.   There is a third mast band that should be around the masthead just above the top, but the platform would not fit around it so it was removed until the top is permanently attached to the mast. [sharp eyes will also notice that the crowsfoot holes are towards the back of the mast.  This will be turned around before the top is attached].
     

     
    So here are two of the shipyard workers just skylarking on the main top.  One seems to see a friend on the ground.
     

     
    It’s a good thing that Dread Pirate Peter hasn’t spotted them.  He has some pointed questions to ask about the location of crowsfoot holes.  And why the bands and wooldings stop halfway down the mast.
     

     
    Auf wiedersehen . . .
     
    Dan
        
  14. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from DSiemens in Queen Anne's Revenge 1710 by shipmodel - FINISHED - 1/36 scale   
    Hello and Happy New Year to all -
     
    This past month has been full of grandkids and holidays that got in the way of what is the most important thing in life - ship modeling
     
    I did manage to complete both sets of the masts, which are packed away until rigging time.  The fore
     

     
    The mizzen
     

     
    And the Bowsprit and jib boom
     

     
    Meanwhile, I have been studying the rigging diagrams and reading Anderson and others.  The first question came when I realized that some of the lines, including the halyards, run from the mastheads to belaying points on deck at the base of the mast.  To do this they have to pass through the platform of the top.  Budriot's plans and the tops that I made from them have no openings aft of the masthead. 
     

     
    I figured that I could solve this in one of two ways - I could simply drill some holes for the lead of the lines, or I could take apart the tops and remove some of the planking to make a larger opening, a much more complicated procedure.  I consulted with some knowledgable modelers including Rob Napier, and Bob Giles sent me some photographs of the tops of the St. George (1701) model at Annapolis. 
     

     
    I also looked at the photographs of the model of Le Sans-Pareil (1757) in the Musee de la Marine.  All of them agreed that removing the planking was the only way to go.  So, with some anxiety, I pried off the trestletrees and crosstrees from under each of the tops.  Fortunately they came away with only one slight greenstick fracture that was easily repaired.  The cleats were shortened, then I used a razor saw to cut through the plank aft of the lubber hole.  The enlarged opening was cleaned up with a blade and sandpaper before the trestletrees and crosstrees were cleaned up and re-attached.  Here they are.  
     

     
    Next, the gratings and coamings.  I have worked out a new way to do them which gives me better results in this larger scale.
     
    Be well
     
    Dan  
  15. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from druxey in Queen Anne's Revenge 1710 by shipmodel - FINISHED - 1/36 scale   
    Hi Daniel -
     
    It really is just as simple as it sounds.  If you look at the plan for the bolster there is a zig-zag line dividing the forward and aft pieces that fit together.  Once I had the shape of the bolster cut and tapered, I drew on the line with a straightedge and a sharp pencil.  Then I went over the lines with the straightedge guiding the back (dull) side of a #10 blade, the curved one, not the pointed #11 blade.  I pushed down fairly hard to make a groove in the wood.  This would have made a visible line all by itself, but I find that doing this pushes the graphite from the pencil down into the groove, darkening it and making it stand out.
     
    I used this same technique on the teak bench seats for the Swan 42 model.  In the computer I drew the multiple wood pieces for the seats, the side-by-side planks and the perimeter framing.  Once it was done to my liking and sized to the model, I printed it out onto thin veneer.  It looked good, but when I scribed the lines the printer ink was driven into the grooves, making seams that in some indescribable way look much more realistic than the simple printed version.
     


     
    Anyway, it seems to work for me.  That's my story and I'm sticking to it.
     
    Dan
     
     
  16. Like
    shipmodel reacted to DORIS in ROYAL CAROLINE 1749 by Doris - 1:40 - CARD   
  17. Like
    shipmodel reacted to rlb in US Brig Oneida 1809 by rlb - The Lumberyard - 1:48 scale - POF - Lake Ontario Warship   
    Continuing work on the cutter
     
     
    After installing the footwaling, the aft platform needed to be cut and installed.  This was made as a "solid" platform.   I cut a guide out of card and used it to trace the rough shape--
     

     
     
    This was sanded until it fit reasonably well--
     

     
     
    Unfortunately, the platform didn't sit low enough.  Furthermore, and after looking at other model photos, I concluded that the "filler" piece I had put between the platform and the footwaling was a figment of my imagination (but wouldn't it be good to have something there to keep things from rolling under the platform and getting lost?).   The best way to get the platform to sit lower was to notch it around the hull framing, and also notch the upper piece of footwaling.  So, along with removing the filler piece, this I did--
     

     
     
    The underside of the platform is not pretty or correct, but that doesn't matter--
     
     
     
     
    Looking at these posted photos, the difference in elevation of the platform is hard to see, but it is actually significant, at this scale and detail level.
     
    I've put a coat of finish on the platform, footwaling, and interior framing, and the next step will be to install the rising pieces--they support the thwarts.  To the left are some spacing jigs that I made to help me get the risings placed correctly--
     

     
     
    Ron
  18. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from rlb in US Brig Oneida 1809 by rlb - The Lumberyard - 1:48 scale - POF - Lake Ontario Warship   
    Coming along very nicely, Ron.  It looks like it will be a Happy New Year for you.
     
    Dan
  19. Like
    shipmodel reacted to rlb in US Brig Oneida 1809 by rlb - The Lumberyard - 1:48 scale - POF - Lake Ontario Warship   
    Thanks, John!
     
    Here I have all but one of the full frames bent and labeled.  As I did each one I marked a small "x" on the top of the plug to help me remember which I had done as I went along--
     

     
     
    A comparison between a rough frame and a sanded frame--
     

     
     
    A few of the frames glued in, and another unfinished frame for comparison--
     
     
     
     
    Carefully sanding a frame, first on the inside, for smoothness.  220, then 320, then 600 grit--
     
     
     
     
    Then scrubbing on flat sandpaper for the sided dimension, 220, then 600.  I ended up leaving the frames about 3/64 inch wide--
     

     
     
    Then the outside (the face to be glued to the planks) was sanded with a small strip of 150 grit sandpaper to reduce the frame to a final thickness of 1/32 inch--
     

     
     
    Then the frame can be glued into place.  The clothespins are holding the "pre-bend" of last full frame as it dries.  The frame just glued in hasn't had it's ends trimmed yet--
     

     
     
    Current progress with all the full frames glued in--
     

     

     
     
    Ron
  20. Like
    shipmodel reacted to DORIS in ROYAL CAROLINE 1749 by Doris - 1:40 - CARD   
  21. Like
    shipmodel reacted to DORIS in ROYAL CAROLINE 1749 by Doris - 1:40 - CARD   
  22. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from WackoWolf in ROYAL CAROLINE 1749 by Doris - 1:40 - CARD   
    Welcome back, Doris -
     
    Seeing your work again was a wonderful Holiday present.  Like Floyd's wife, mine has become jaded with all the "ho-hum" just another ship model, but she is always eager and excited to see your postings and the beauty of your work.   She thanks you too.
     
    Be well
     
    Dan
  23. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from DORIS in ROYAL CAROLINE 1749 by Doris - 1:40 - CARD   
    Welcome back, Doris -
     
    Seeing your work again was a wonderful Holiday present.  Like Floyd's wife, mine has become jaded with all the "ho-hum" just another ship model, but she is always eager and excited to see your postings and the beauty of your work.   She thanks you too.
     
    Be well
     
    Dan
  24. Like
    shipmodel reacted to tlevine in HMS Atalanta 1775 by tlevine - FINISHED - 1:48 scale - from TFFM plans   
    The main topsail sheet bitt pins are located within the upper well.  These insert onto the aft face of the lower deck beam and there is a score for the upper deck beam.  Once the well has been secured in place it will be difficult to access this area so I started them now.  The pins are 9" square above the upper deck beam.  Below that they taper on the aft face.  They are perpendicular to the keel.  Rather than make the entire bitt now and risk damage, I only made the pins up to the upper deck beam.  To maintain correct alignment I glued on two temporary cross bars away from where the cross-piece and gallows will be placed.  Holes were drilled through the score for the upper deck beam and into the beam.  Steel pins are holding the pins in place.  Holes have also been cut in the hatch cover for the main jeer bitt pins.  The pictures show the bitt pins before and after the upper well was installed.
     

     

  25. Like
    shipmodel got a reaction from rlb in US Brig Oneida 1809 by rlb - The Lumberyard - 1:48 scale - POF - Lake Ontario Warship   
    Hi Ron -
     
    Coming along very nicely.  The symmetry and the evenness of the reveals is well done.  Looking forward to seeing it completed.
     
    Dan
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