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Mirabell61

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Everything posted by Mirabell61

  1. Smart idea Mobile 1, for putting transp. blue foil to the casing sides below the waterline, good job, the illution of water in the casing is great Nils
  2. Update cutting out the bulwarks, the last three of 12 freeing ports, 8 mm square, inserting the frames and stiffening out of the inner bulwarks with stanchions. This is what I was a bit anxious about, after all its just getting started, pulling through and now I`m pleased with the result. I had extra bought a new set of keyhole files and some carving chissels. The ship has to be tilted into the correct position on my knees, and carefully avoiding contact distortion with the fragile railing sections during the process. Al uneccessary, removable superstructure parts, masting and hold sections are layed aside for doing so. Before filing out the roughf drilled holes to square close fit, the metal plating bits have to be removed from the outer bulwarks with a sharp chissel. Next will be to cut the holes for the mooring ropes and to place the Panama-fairleads directly behind the bulwarks and place the deck-mooring bollards Nils cutting through the plating metal, removing the small square parts, masking, taping and positioning of the freeing ports. inserting and glueing in the freeport-frames stanchions for stiffening out the bulwarks. the freeports lower side is flush with the deck
  3. good looking superstructure Javelin, the windowframes are nice and look like precise cuts Nils
  4. thank you John, Andy already mentioned what you said, and I also have these hinged steel plates over the outside bulwarks fitted on my tallships . Those tallships used to have large amounts of overcoming sea on the lee side when sailing hard braced in strong winds. The Corsicana aka Ergenstrasse only had openings though with steelbar slip-through protections. Nils each two hinges on the upper side of the flaps
  5. phantastic work Javelin, never seen such precise modeling at that scale before !!! Nils
  6. thank you very much Keith, Update it took me several hours to find a way in doing the freeing ports with adequate size into the well-deck bulwarks. Finally I`ve chosen a version whereby a frame will be inserted and glued into a cut out square opening (in a close fit as good as I can get it done), and soldered-in vertical bars prevent crew being washed through into rough seas. I used a scrap dummy piece of the bulwark 1,5mm ply for doing so Nils there will be 12 of these frames the frame will probably be flush the outer skin
  7. Valeriy, your deck plating in brass is super, good luck with the further soldering job, I know its not easy th keep the heat away from the wood Nils
  8. thank you very much Andy, good input, I think I know what you are saying, I had also ordered these Panama fairleads metal-castings together with the cargo winches and strong deck-bollards already some time ago in scale 1:100. Your confirmation on the usage of these devices gives me confidence to install them behind the smaller bulwark openings. Googleing up Panama Fairleads I found this pic, which shows exactly this described arrangement...... Nils the red casting fairlead here is directly behind the railing (resp. bulwark) to lead the mooring ropes from the bollard to the shore bollards
  9. Many thanks Andy, I know what you mean, I built these "oneway Flaps" into the bulwarks of my tallships Gorch Fock and Pamir, for exactly your described reason. For the Corsicana and subsequently the Ergenstrasse I wish it were so, but there are permenant rectangular shape openings, each 3 in fore- and aft welldeck bulwarks, pls. see encl. pic. I trust that these do not only drain overcoming water, but that they also are openings for the mooring ropes Nils these openings..... (here the Corsicana) under steam with the former masting arrangement, and without bridge wing cabs
  10. Update I`m doing the vertical ladders and have painted all 18 vents. I think the bridge with it`s wing cabs and the deck over the wheelhouse for taking bearings with landmarks will be next. What I am a bit anxious about is for cutting out the scuppers into the welldeck bulwarks. A mess by doing so can ruin the whole hull appearence. Still the cargo derricks-rigging, the funnelstays and the mast shrouds have to be fitted. The 105 year old laker steamer is being built in the 1955 movie version and therefore quite compact Nils painting all 18 vents. Toothpics are helpfull here. The ladders are chemically blackened The radio cabin has become 2 antenna connection terminals the bridgedeck is held to the supports by means of 4 tiny spindles (through the hollow squarebar profiles) and M1,6 nuts and washers on the deck. open and closed boat under the davits the anchor windless and the chain stoppers are mounted the upward stairs are for dry fit position check. Here the position for the radio-cabin can be seen I think I`ll hang one boat in open version and the other (Stb) one closed with canvas decking. The third closed boat will settle upright on the aft hold #4 the aft portion of the boatsdeck as well as the davits must still be painted
  11. excellent work Siggi, how did you do the "eyebrow" over the rectangular window? Wood carving or resin casting? Nils
  12. Thank you John, I first thought that I would`nt get all details fitted in line in that section, after my decision was to add the water tank on supports, 4 additional engineroom vents and the skylight, and in opposite to an earlier post of mine, there will also be a radio-opperaters cabin (where the card template is laying) Therefore the skylight had to be created very compact, and with 3 light panels on each side, but after all I get everything brought in line, which I`m quite pleased with. Nils the two vents behind the skylight will still be shortend, the freshwater-tank will get some connection tubes
  13. Valeriy, I like the surface condition of your spray putty, could this also be applied with a paint brush for acceptable results ? It looks like your deck is from brass plates, its hard to see from the photo Nils
  14. splended work Valeriy, its a beautiful hull, will you imitate the riveting and do plating ? Nils
  15. Hi Valeriy, I like the way and methode you tackle the hull-building. BTW why was this ship chosen for order, does your customer have a special relation to it ? When I built my steamship "Heinrich Kayser" my grandfather in 1922 was the captain in command when it foundered in the north Atlantic without a trace, and I had to do a lot of research for building the model. Nils
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