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Wintergreen

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Posts posted by Wintergreen

  1. I agree on EdT:s build logs as a fantastic source of information. I bought the first Naiad book only for the tools and drafting sections in it.

    He didn't use scales, instead he used the profile plan and took heights from it directly. The plan was mounted on a board with a ledge representing the bottom line.

    Framing is a lengthy process. It feels it will never end, and then all of a sudden all frames are in 😉 

    How is that wood for sanding? I used apple, which I knew would be tedious, but there was less risk of sanding too much.

     

    Keep it up!

  2. On 2/29/2024 at 1:35 PM, KeithAug said:

    The last 6 months have flashed by but sadly he isn't showing many shipwright skills yet. 1.thumb.jpeg.1c2e4d88abd69cc054cfd02f41cdb667.jpeg

    Oh, I love babies! (especially when you can hand them back to their parents if they get smelly 😄 )

    Two of our grandkids are moving away in May, but the other family is still producing. Next one is due in early June 🙂 

     

    Oh, and by the way, nice progress Keith!  

  3. Glad to be of inspiration Andy 🙂

    It is a learning curve for me too. I have found out that the first attempt is usually decent, but no 2 goes in the bin because it is done in somewhat of a hurry. Then you settle down and let it take the time it takes and the rest is good as well. For time it takes.

    Lovely marking gauges you got there. I'm pondering over miniature tools now and then. Apart from being enourmusly pretty, are they useful?

  4. What a nice build you've got going here Andy!

    I'm glad to have found it. The similarities between our builds are quite striking, however, you go into much greater detail in keeping to the original than I do. Hats off for that, sir!

    On the other hand of course they are similar! Atlantica is a scaled up version of a British smack built 1903 in Porthleven, which is basically just around the corner from Brixham 😄 

     

    So, I'll grab a seat a little to the side here. Is the popcorn machinge functional or do I bring my own?

  5. Soo, this was a funny little piece to piece together, piece by piece, so to say. All dovetails and pins handcut with jewellers saw and filed to fit. 

    It is the forward hatch and stairway just aft of the main mast. I decided to give it a wash of staining to dampen the quite white appearance of it. In order to match I sanded the main hatch  coaming also and applied a wash to it too. When dry I will give it a quick touch up with 320 grit paper and apply a couple of layers of laquer.

    The bottom edge is sanded to the same rise as the deck beams so I used the top edge as index when mating all the corners. 

    The two small blocks in the upper right corner (one with an arrow) was used to get the right size of the openings, and also keep things fair and square.

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    Here it is still moist after the staining hence the quite dark colour. It is not glued in place yet either. The real deal was through bolted from top down through the deck beams. I will not bother with that. I know my limitations (I think). 😉 

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    Cheers guys!

  6. Silly posts or not, it would of course be possible to do the tail piece using a lathe and controlled bed. It would take two clear passes with the dovetail bit. The pins, not so much because you get a rounded inner surface.

    Anyway, I only have a wood lathe and no usable index table (and no dovetail bit of mini size) so hand tools it is.

    The coaming came out pretty neat. Here it just sits in it place, not glued in. Two coats of water base matte lacquer applied to the sides. 

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    And finally a perspective picture of the build. As usual with all the debris in the background 😄 

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    Pax et bonum!

  7. Welcome back Mark!

    It is quite apparent that you enjoy the drawing business. Also, knowing that you are lefthanded means that you probably (but not necessarily) is quite apt at the artistic side of drawing also, and not only the engineering side.

    (We discussed work benches a long time ago and I envied, still env, your lefthand adapted work bench).

     

    Also, I like the reasoning about the false floor in the quarter galleries. It is just on another level of interpreting the original drafts and applying them to a somewhat virtual reality in 1:64.

     

    I hope that your nerves get back in working order and so,

    Keep it up!

  8. Well thank you Gary @FriedClams 🙂 

    I totally agree that it is not possible to follow everything here on MSW, there are just too many excellent builds going on all the time.

    And yes, cancer can really give you mental ghosts to follow you along. But, being in my mid 50's I am focusing on living many years still! Cheers to you too and all the best!

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