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Everything posted by wefalck
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HMCSS Victoria 1855 by BANYAN - 1:72
wefalck replied to BANYAN's topic in - Build logs for subjects built 1851 - 1900
I would spray-paint the wheel with a sand-cloured paint - there is also Vallejo-paint called 'wood' I believe. Next you can brush on e.g. some mahagony lacquer, either water- or organic solvent-based. Do this in thin layers to have control. You can also mask e.g. the rim, if the wheel had a brass one.- 993 replies
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Hi Pat, Indeed completely misunderstood you. However, perhaps the design of these toolmakers vises could perhaps be adapted to your problem. Have a block running in a slot in the bench and tie it down with a bolt that screws into round bar, which in turn is pushed into horizontal holes in the bench.
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Rope-Stropped Blocks for Boom Vang
wefalck replied to Julie Mo's topic in Masting, rigging and sails
Thanks, I thought so, but wanted to have it confirmed. Good thing that I don't have this book -
This is an image of a 19th century boeier, which were rather different animals from the subject of this build-log. These boeiers were used for commercial passenger traffic around the (Noord-)Holland and also as (private) pleasure boats. For those, who read Dutch, there is a comprehensive book on the subject with a lot of lines drawings etc.: VERMEER, J. (2004): De Boeier.- 528 p., Alkmaar (De Alk & Heijnen Watersport).
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What you mean actually by 'set into and flush with the top of the bench' ? Not sure then that would help you, but you may want to look into so-called toolmakers insert vices. They don't have a horizontal spindle, but the loose jaw is tightened with a bolt from above. The bolt screws into a horizontal bar that is held by either notches in the underside of the vise, or the bar goes through horizontal borings (in this case you need access from the side). They came from 25 mm jaw width upwards. Here a sample picture: I have several of them for use on my machines. It is strange, but the brand name Zyliss conjures up in me not exactly the image of a precision tool, as the company seems to be mostly known for its hand-driven kitchen implements, such as meat-grinders, onion-choppers, salad-spinners, and the likes ... I have seen these bench-vises, but thought they were made from cheap die-cast zinc.
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Rope-Stropped Blocks for Boom Vang
wefalck replied to Julie Mo's topic in Masting, rigging and sails
BTW from which book did the contested drawing actually come from ? -
Rope-Stropped Blocks for Boom Vang
wefalck replied to Julie Mo's topic in Masting, rigging and sails
I don't know the book, from which the drawing came, but looking at made me scratch my head Mechanically it doesn't make any sense ... I was going to comment that whipped blocks, i.e. from which the running part cannot be detached, would be rather uncommen in real running parts of the rigging. In case the running part becomes damaged from use, one would have to unstrap the block and replace the whole splicing, serving etc., rather than simply replacing the running line. On backstays it would, however, make sense, as the movement of the running part is only limited, with not so much wear. For blocks with eyes at both ends, I think there would be long splice alongside the block and the eyes tied off with yarn at both ends. I think either Lever or Steel have drawing that shows that, didn't check. -
Well, you partly answered yourself your question: the key point is particle size or rather the absence of particles. For this it is important to recall the difference between the different media: Paint essentially is a suspension of pigment particles in a solvent and film-formers; the objective is to create a covering layer of paint made up from the pigments and the film-formers; in the case of acrylic paints, the acrylic monomers will also undergo some sort of chemical reaction, by which they cross-link to form a layer into which the pigment particles are embedded. Dyes are molecules dissolved in a solvent; the dyes either adsorbe to the surface of the material or may undergo also some chemical reaction with the material to be dyed; in consequence, they do not form a continuous layer on the surface of the materials. Inks can be either paints or dyes; in the former case they are called pigmented inks; acrylic inks fall into this category; like paints they form a more or less continuous layer on the paintes surface albeit their particle size is much smaller than in paints, allowing them to be used with e.g. pens. Simulating the tarring etc. of ropes presumably can be done with inks, as on the prototype the tar only partially penetrated and part of if acted as a dye and part of it as a paint. Paints on the other hand would stay on the surface and form a layer. I gather paints could be used to simulate the tarring with coal-tar of later periods, but would be less suitable to simulate applications of wood- (Stockholm-)tar.
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DIY Workbench Mini Vac Cleaner with Trap
wefalck replied to Tecko's topic in Modeling tools and Workshop Equipment
The separator is a good idea - it is easier to search through a small pile of debris than across the whole workbench (which unlikely is as clean as in a clean-room ). I gather the rentention capacity would depend on its length, so a long, narrow jar might be safer than a shallow one, or you would need to put a bit of foam in front of the internal suction pipe. -
I have not been suggesting that a 1/72 or 1/48 scale resin model would be the solution for your problem.
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- dumas
- barrel back
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If you have CAD-program and the skills to go with it, you could develop a virtual 3D-Model and have it printed ... trawling the 3D-printing companies, such as Shapeways, might also be worthwhile. Wasn't there even a Chris Craft with an egine here on the forum, or was this a Riva ? I have been tossing with the idea of a model of an early run-about or speedboat with one of those huge marinised surplus aero-engines that they used in the 1920s or so. There various WWI resin engines in 1/72 and 1/48 scale available.
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One probably needs several sizes of vise ... the best small bench vises are those for jewellers/clockmakers, but they can be very expensive, even second hand. Brands are Bergeon, Leinen or Boley over here in Europe. It is a good idea to have one that can be turned. For precision work a jaw width of 40 to max. 60 mm seems a good size. If you cannot buy one of the above brand ones, it is always a good idea to check the one you intend to buy, whether the jaw close neatly and parallel. There is a lot of cast-iron scrap being flogged to undiscerning customers. For really small work, you might also want to look at so-called toomakers insert vises. They come as small as 25 mm jaw-width and are (usually) very precise (at only around 35€). They are mainly used in EDM-machining, but come hand for other purposes. You can use them on the bench, but may have find a way to fix it to the bench - they have normally two M4 threaded holes at the bottom.
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Laying out plans in a smaller workshop
wefalck replied to alde's topic in Modeling tools and Workshop Equipment
I kind of suffer from the same disease: not enough space ... one soution I decided upon some time ago was to tackle only projects that can be drawn on an A4-sheet ... for bigger projects I would scan the plans and correct them for distortions as mentioned above. You then can print out (again checking for distortions) as many working copies as you need. For individual parts I usually print them out even at a magnification (say 10x) and add measurements by hand. This allows you to correct for additive errors due to line thicknesses etc. The overall part has to have the correct size and you can correct your measurements to fit into the overall size. In other words, you arrive at a sort of graphical cooking-book from which to work. I have either the sheet flying around my work-table or fix it to light-weight clip-board. -
A displacement hull driven by sails cannot go beyond the theoretical hull speed you mentioned, raked mast or not. Sails just cannot supply enough energy in order to overcome the cavitation effects at the end of the hull that would develop. Before towing-canals and the theoretical foundation (e.g. Froude) were developed, ship designers experimented by feel and looking for examples in nature. As you noted, it is the combination of design and implementation parameters that determine, whether a given ship is fast or not. Changing this combination by trim, for instance, can change the performance rapidly. However, as I said before, raking masts can make a particular ship faster, but not necessarily so - but it certainly makes it look faster, which can be important in both, a naval and a commercial context. A fast looking ship is likely to attract more business. This is why the ocean-liners of old were given raking funnels. At a time when ship designers experimented with waterlines, where the main breadth was above the middle, i.e. that had very sharp, even hollow lines forward, raking the mast may have brought the centre of gravity of the sail plan closer to the centre of gravity of the body plan, thus reducing the tendency to dig in. The same could have been achieved by stepping the mast further aft, but then the mast would have come to close together, partially blanketting each other. When in the later 1850s the hulls became longer and the sharpness more evenly distributed between the forward and rear section, the need for raking masts disappeared. One should also distinguish between naval and commercial practices. Commercial ships need to be able to maintain a steady speed across all weather conditions in order to achieve short travel times, i.e. the average speed is important, while for naval ships often the top speed is the important criterion.
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I tend to think that it also depends on the type of ship you are building. Pre-industrial ships were built without any machinery and everything was shaped by hand - this can be reproduced by hand-work (apart perhaps for the tedium of sawing timber to size). Industrial-age ships increasingly tend to have geometrically well defined parts, which would have been produced using machinery, which in turn are easier to reproduce using also machinery. It is also a question of the scale you are working in. Bigger parts are easier to handle manually than small parts that may require only minimal amounts of material to be removed, which is easier to do with the controls of lathe or milling machine.
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Mast rake is also a matter of fashion as the centre of gravity of the sailplan can also moved aft during the design or building phase, thus moving aft the fulcrum that acts on the hull and makes it dive into the sea. It is noticeable that a pronounced rake was fashionable from around the mid-1830s to about the mid 1850s. The 'true' clippers of the late 1840s to late 1850s, though having comparatively little bouyancy forward, mostly did not have very raked masts. The rake seems to have been also more pronounced on schooners and some brigs than on barques and full-rigged ships.
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Well, saying of a Hamburg ship that it is German before 18.01.1871 is still correct, as it were the German states before then. Finding conclusive plans for German merchantmen is quite difficult due to the archival losses.
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Quite fascinating how much pictorial evidence and real thing from that period. BTW, nice build !
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- sidewheeler
- arabia
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Gondola by AntonyUK
wefalck replied to AntonyUK's topic in - Build logs for subjects built 1901 - Present Day
The Donatelli is indeed a very good book that has also a section on the ergonomics of handling a gondola. The museum owns several historical gondole and numerous models. The lines taken off a mid-19th century gondola are also reproduced in Pâris' Souvenirs de la Marine. Here are some pictures of relevant craft from the museum in Venice: http://www.maritima-et-mechanika.org/maritime/venezia/museonavalevenezia-2.html -
Gondola by AntonyUK
wefalck replied to AntonyUK's topic in - Build logs for subjects built 1901 - Present Day
The owner of the Web-site quoted above is Gilberto Penzo. He probably is the expert on Venetian boats and has written a host of books on the subject. Friendly gentleman too, I visited him a couple of times in his (work)shop. Here's a list of publications on the subject: ANONYM (1987): Boats of Venice – Le Barche di Venezia.- 192 p. CHAPELLE, H.I. (1957): The Gondola.- The Mariner’s Mirror, 43: 158. CROVATO, G., CROVATO, M., DIVARI, L. (1975): Barche della Laguna Veneta.- 136 p., Venezia (Arsenale Cooperativa Editrice). DONATELLI, C. (1994): Gondola. An Extraordinary Naval Architecture.- 160 p. (arsenale editrice). GARGASACCI NEVE, G. (1979): La Gondola, storia, tecnica, linguaggio.- 69 p., 15 Taf., Venezia (Arsenale Coop. Ed.). GIUPONI, G. (1985): Arte di far Gondole.- 80 p. + 3 Taf., Venezia (Assoc. Settemari). MUNEROTTO, G. [Ed.] (2009): Dizionario Illustrato Storico-Tecnico die principali termini di Construzione navale e marineria Veneziana.- 223 p., Venezia (Mare di Carta). MUNEROTTO, G. (1994): Gondole. Sei secoli di Evoluzione nella storia e nell'arte.- 103 p., Venezia (il Cardo Editore s.r.l.). PENZO, G. (1992): Il Bragosso.- 255 p., Venezia (Libreria Editrice). MUNEROTTO, G. (2001): La Batèla. Umile protagonista.- 64 p., Venezia (Mare di Carta). NACCARI, M. (1999): A Venezia una gondola dalla epoca "americana".- Newport Yacht Digest, 95: 94-95. PATMORE, D. (1950): The Plight of the Gondolier.- Country Life, CVII: 298-9. PENZO, G. (1996): Barche Veneziane – Catalogo Illustrato dei pianti die costruzione.- 90 p., Venezia (Libreria Editrice). PENZO, G. (1999): La Gondola - Storia, progettazione e costruzione della più straordinaria imbarcazione tradizionale di Venezia.- 254 p., Venezia (Cicero). PENZO, G. (2000): Navi Veneziani. Catalogo illustrato die piani die costruzione - Venetian Ships. An Illustrated Catalogue of Draughts.- 160 p., Trieste (LINT - Editoriale Associati s.r.l.). PENZO, G. (2000): Un restauro integralista. Il ripristino dell’ ANNAMARIA.- Arte Navale, 1(1): 50-54, (AR.CO Edizoni). PENZO, G. (20022): Barche Veneziane, Catalogo Illustrato dei pianti die costruzione - Venetian Boats, an illustrated catalogue of draughts.- 234 p., Venezia (Libreria Editrice). PENZO, G., POLO, F., SCARPA, F., TAMASSIA, M. (2005): Maestri d’ascia. Costruire barche a Venezia.- p., Venezia ( Marsilio Editori). PERGOLIS, R., PIZZARELLO, U. (1999): Le Barche di Venezia – The Boats of Venice.- 179 p. + XVI Taf., Venezia (Libreria Editrice Il Leggio). PIZZARELLO, U. (1984): Boote in Venedig.- 72 p., Venezia (L’Altra Riva). RUBIN DE CERVIN, G.B. (1956): The Evolution of the Venetian Gondola.- Mariner’s Mirror, 42(3): 201-18. RUBIN DE CERVIN, G.B. (1978): Bateaux et batellerie de Venise.- 205 p., Lausanne (Edita Lausanne/Vilo Paris). BTW, Penzo also sells kits based on his drawings ... -
1:64 Copper plating
wefalck replied to Peter Y.'s topic in Building, Framing, Planking and plating a ships hull and deck
This topic has been discussed already several times on this forum and I apologise for posting again the two pictures below that show what the coppering really looks like (albeit reconstructed): DON FERNANDO II E GLÓRIA (1843) in Lisbon Two observations: - plates overlap top-down and fore-aft, meaning that the process started at the keel and worked upward, and back to forward - the nailing causes depression - there are no protruding nail-heads; the reason is that the plates were fastened on a layer of felt soaked in tar. Assuming that they are pressed/stamped, you can improve those plates from the kit by gently rubbing them on the side with the protrusions with a piece of round hardwood on a cutting mat. This pushes the protrusions back and leaves slight dimples. One has to play a bit with the amount rubbing and the pressure applied. They are then to be fastened with the side that showed the protrusions inside, i.e. the other way around from what most people would do. Incidentally, the copper-green colour, as shown on the second picture, only appears when the ship is in dry-dock for prolonged periods. The 'service colour' is a dull copper-brown, as on the first picture.- 14 replies
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- pickle
- caldercraft
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I tend to think that in a well-done glue-joint the glue does act more like a tenon between the two pieces of wood; it sort of keys into the surface roughness, while the high points touch. The glue should not form a separate layer between the pieces, as if you were glueing say two pieces of platic with a contact cement.
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Whom are you telling ... just watching this at the airport on my way to my 93 year old mother. Still she comes along promisingly!
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Nice work ! I am just wondering, why the bar in front of the freeing-ports are outside of the bulwark - I know the arrangement with them inside, which has the objective to keep objects/people inside ...
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- falls of clyde
- tanker
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