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Everything posted by ScottRC
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Got the Renwall kit Friday and already have it assembled and ready to paint. Forgot how much fun "toy scale" was. Kit maybe has thirty parts in it. I say toy scale because pretty much everything in the kit had been molded thick and with minimum detail and emphasis in function more then scale. I am lousy at getting pictures. I am more focused on building but I will try to take some pics tonight and post.
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Very interesting subject. I am learning a lot from your thread. Scott
- 126 replies
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- pennsylvania
- ship of the line
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the painting I saw was in the book Classic Sailing Ships, the artwork of Cornelius DeVries.
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- paddle warships
- plan request
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I was looking through a book last night of nautical art and came across a painting of the Tweed and thought, boy what a nice looking ship that beacons to have her lines taken and modeled. Then looked up her history and found that is had quite a story starting out as a paddle wheeled warship in India and ending as a clipper. I do not have the source of the painting available right now but will look it up tonight.
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- paddle warships
- plan request
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If you tie flys, then you will not have any problem seizing the shroud to the deadeye and you would find it easier and less frustrating to make your own ratlines vs trying to use the kits. You also have the some great tools for the task such as your loom, bobbin, and head cement. I like using head cement for sealing knots and seizing more than while glue.
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BE, I am so happy to have seen your work. I have this kit and now am excited to try your silkspan technique on the sails. You show that there is no limit on what could be done with these Heller kits. Thanks, Scott
- 126 replies
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- le superbe
- heller
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Bob, I must chime in that the Essex is one of my favorite ships so I have been quite interested in your build. Very nice job, looks like you have overcome the framing issues? I also was a fan of the Floquil Polyscale line of locomotive paints. I have just a little bit left of Engine Black and Refer Brown was a great basecoat for simulating walnut. I also liked the reds and greens and all the paints behaved well on sealed wood. They also accepted washes with oil based paints and turpentine. One alternative I have been using is the Americana line of craft acrylics. They seem to have large array of colors that were like what was available from Floquil. The only drawback is that they will not adhere to a smooth polycoat surface, so a primer, such as Tamiya's Mr. Surfacer, would have to be put on or if its a sealed wood surface, sanded, and the paint given a topcoat sealant before I could do the oil washes. Look forward to seeing more! Scott
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- essex
- model shipways
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Dragon calls their kits "Smart Kits" due to their injection molding process allows them to mold parts in full instead of in halves. For instance, the Trumpeter Ticonderoga's island came as one injected molded piece, a lot like a resin kit would have, where as the Trumpeter Yorktown has the island as two pieces. Less part count and less seams to fill. After building these high tech Chinese kits for the past years, I think the old Renwal kits is going to be a real eye opener. Flash, globs of plastic, and injector pin marks up the wazoo, boy am I excited. Scott
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Karl, I have built the kit strait from the box and am glad I did. The kit supplied eyebolts can be used but use CA/superglue on them, not plastic cement. They need to stay secured. I never encountered any problems with the dead eyes. They are much stronger on the Connie than on the Cuttysark or Alabama. About the only thing I would never use again are the ratlines. They are way too thin, come apart easily, and a lot harder to cut and install than rigging them from scratch. There are a lot of great experts on this forum with blogs on rigging the ratlines that you will find interesting. Scott
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The water is a fun. I used I technique I learned at a IPMS show a few years ago. The model is mounted on a picture frame. I painted the glass the color of what the South China Sea would look like. The painted side is face down opposite of the side the model is mounted on. I then lay on Artist Gesso by Liquitex, this is what artists use to cover and protect oil paintings. It goes on rather thick and goopy and can be molded into waves and built up in layers and dries clear and has no odor. I then added white caps and foam with oil paint and then gave everything a coat of clear satin Krylon artists clear coat. One of my favorite movies has be Bridges at Toko Ri because it always gave the feeling of how dark and lonely, yet personal, that war can be. I wanted the model to represent the feeling I get when I watch the movie. Dragon kits are at par with Trumpeter and I think are really good. I did not have a single problem with the kit, although all I used was the hull, which I ended up building a secondary hull around, and the lower part of the island. The flight deck is a laser cut wooden aftermarket kit that was stained, painted, then sanded and weathered. Everything else was scratchbuilt or robbed from other kits.
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Kimberly, I would definitely get the Heller Nina and Pinta. They are smaller that the Santa Maria, great fit, and are fun to put together. However, I must warn you, the instructions are translated French and are kinda buggers to follow, but again, you now have experience on how a plastic ship model goes together so should enjoy the builds. Squadron Mail Order has both of these kits in stock. P.S. the ratlines are plastic. I built this back when I was just starting and felt I wanted to spend time practicing laying up standing and running rigging than spend hours sewing ratlines.
- 94 replies
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- santa maria
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Kimberly, I am very impressed with how your build came out. I love the sails I have to agree with Ulises, the Bounty would be an excellent next choice. I built one, pictured, for my Mother many years ago and just built another one last year for my Mother in Law.
- 94 replies
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- santa maria
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I'm jazzed, Revell just re-released the old chunks of plastic that was to resemble an modernized Essex class aircraft carrier. One is their 1/540 Hornet (aka Wasp, Lexington, Essex, etc...) and even better, the Renwal 1/500 Shangri La (aka Lexington). My father served on the Lex when she was re-commissioned in 1955/56. I have kit-bashed built one in 1/700 but now feel I need to get the 1/500 Renwal kit and make a larger scale. Whew! Now I don't have to gag at the ebay prices nor look are either scratchbuilding, or like I did with the 1/700 scale, take a Trumpeter 1/350 WW2 version and modernize it. That was quite a fun undertaking. Alright, enough of my talking about lead barges and back to sailing ships.
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Robbyn, Your coil and rope work is looking amazing on this build. Great job Scott
- 234 replies
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- 18th century longboat
- model shipways
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Hi Kimberly, Tying shrouds can be like herding cats. Tighten one and the other loosens third down on the opposite side. After a while some are tight and some are all loose and goosey. I have found that it is easier to keep them all a little loose and secured with a single hitch and then start to taught each one little by little, from side to side, until they are all equally taunt and the mast is strait. Then I tie my knot and seal it. Agree that the kit thread is probably poo, so go the craft store and pick out some thread that I would say "feels right". I mean find something that feels easy to handle and tie. I used thick "coat and button" thread when I was learning because is behaved well in my novice hands, didn't fray when cut, and was cheap. Also pick up some Beeswax, usually at the craft store in the candle section. We run our line through it so that is keeps the line manageable when laying out the line and it seems to act as a lubricant with passing the line through blocks, holes ,and when tying hitches and knots. Keep up the great work.
- 94 replies
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- santa maria
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Help with question regarding HMS Victory at Trafalgar
ScottRC replied to AllanP's topic in Nautical/Naval History
Yes, thanks Pete for the visit and instructions. -
You work has so much character and emotion in it.
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- patric obrian
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