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kruginmi got a reaction from Kevin in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
Thanks for all the likes!
7 hours and 180 pieces of wood (and counting) the bulkheads are pretty close to done. Still need the hinges and door knobs to make the doors pop and the gel coating will help accentuate the paneling.
I also will add some pieces on the fore and aft panel between the beams to clean up the top edge and provide some added strength to keep it from shifting in the future. With the deck extension the British added these bulkheads are pretty far under the quarterdeck lip. I will keep a gap in the floor planking for some glimpses.
Now on to the mast partners.....
-mark
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kruginmi got a reaction from Kevin in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
On to the bulkheads! The windows ended up being 66 different pieces of wood, it will be interesting to see how many pieces are used for these 3 panels.
The approach for the 3 panels (2 cross ship, one bow and aft connecting) was to use a 3 ply sandwich of 1/32" basswood, used on other builds in this forum. The middle piece is a solid piece of wood with the 2 other being trim pieces added to give the look of fancier paneling.
The initial form was defined through the use of cereal box cardboard. If any one needs that detail let me know, but needless to say it took around 3-4 iterations before I was satisfied (around a full size Cheerio box - hah, hah). Once I was satisfied with the fit I transferred to the basswood and cut out:
The panels were cut to fit under a defined deck beam, flush with the rear edge. You can see in the above photo the Legos used to help hold things up (another great idea from this forum). I then defined the doorway locations which required more effort than I thought. The original location looked great but upon trying the panel in location was obvious had an issue with the location of the stairs to the berth deck. I moved them farther out but then realized the door locations had to be equivalent on the aft bulkhead for the connecting partition to work and, of course, they were now too far out. So....third time the charm and I got to an acceptable location:
The connecting panel was added and the trim work to allow them to connect. I added some preliminary trim pieces to check out the pattern I sought after, but it is still incomplete. The doors will not have windows added to them.
A final check required before the push to complete the panels was to add the other quarterdeck beams. I love it when a plan comes together:
Tonight the plan is to complete the trim pieces on all three panels, add solid 3/32" pieces of wood between the beams on the fore and aft piece for strength and a more finished look. The metalwork for the hinges and door knobs will be this weekend. Then the pieces get stored away until the cannon carriage bolts are affixed.
Not too much work, but a tremendous change in visual appeal.
-mark
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kruginmi got a reaction from Elmer Cornish in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
Thanks for all the likes!
7 hours and 180 pieces of wood (and counting) the bulkheads are pretty close to done. Still need the hinges and door knobs to make the doors pop and the gel coating will help accentuate the paneling.
I also will add some pieces on the fore and aft panel between the beams to clean up the top edge and provide some added strength to keep it from shifting in the future. With the deck extension the British added these bulkheads are pretty far under the quarterdeck lip. I will keep a gap in the floor planking for some glimpses.
Now on to the mast partners.....
-mark
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kruginmi reacted to Mirabell61 in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
Great Progress Mark,
very good looking Wood joining work, also the Stern Windows look great
Nils
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kruginmi got a reaction from harvey1847 in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
Thanks for all the likes!
7 hours and 180 pieces of wood (and counting) the bulkheads are pretty close to done. Still need the hinges and door knobs to make the doors pop and the gel coating will help accentuate the paneling.
I also will add some pieces on the fore and aft panel between the beams to clean up the top edge and provide some added strength to keep it from shifting in the future. With the deck extension the British added these bulkheads are pretty far under the quarterdeck lip. I will keep a gap in the floor planking for some glimpses.
Now on to the mast partners.....
-mark
-
kruginmi got a reaction from jaerschen in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
On to the bulkheads! The windows ended up being 66 different pieces of wood, it will be interesting to see how many pieces are used for these 3 panels.
The approach for the 3 panels (2 cross ship, one bow and aft connecting) was to use a 3 ply sandwich of 1/32" basswood, used on other builds in this forum. The middle piece is a solid piece of wood with the 2 other being trim pieces added to give the look of fancier paneling.
The initial form was defined through the use of cereal box cardboard. If any one needs that detail let me know, but needless to say it took around 3-4 iterations before I was satisfied (around a full size Cheerio box - hah, hah). Once I was satisfied with the fit I transferred to the basswood and cut out:
The panels were cut to fit under a defined deck beam, flush with the rear edge. You can see in the above photo the Legos used to help hold things up (another great idea from this forum). I then defined the doorway locations which required more effort than I thought. The original location looked great but upon trying the panel in location was obvious had an issue with the location of the stairs to the berth deck. I moved them farther out but then realized the door locations had to be equivalent on the aft bulkhead for the connecting partition to work and, of course, they were now too far out. So....third time the charm and I got to an acceptable location:
The connecting panel was added and the trim work to allow them to connect. I added some preliminary trim pieces to check out the pattern I sought after, but it is still incomplete. The doors will not have windows added to them.
A final check required before the push to complete the panels was to add the other quarterdeck beams. I love it when a plan comes together:
Tonight the plan is to complete the trim pieces on all three panels, add solid 3/32" pieces of wood between the beams on the fore and aft piece for strength and a more finished look. The metalwork for the hinges and door knobs will be this weekend. Then the pieces get stored away until the cannon carriage bolts are affixed.
Not too much work, but a tremendous change in visual appeal.
-mark
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kruginmi got a reaction from harvey1847 in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
On to the bulkheads! The windows ended up being 66 different pieces of wood, it will be interesting to see how many pieces are used for these 3 panels.
The approach for the 3 panels (2 cross ship, one bow and aft connecting) was to use a 3 ply sandwich of 1/32" basswood, used on other builds in this forum. The middle piece is a solid piece of wood with the 2 other being trim pieces added to give the look of fancier paneling.
The initial form was defined through the use of cereal box cardboard. If any one needs that detail let me know, but needless to say it took around 3-4 iterations before I was satisfied (around a full size Cheerio box - hah, hah). Once I was satisfied with the fit I transferred to the basswood and cut out:
The panels were cut to fit under a defined deck beam, flush with the rear edge. You can see in the above photo the Legos used to help hold things up (another great idea from this forum). I then defined the doorway locations which required more effort than I thought. The original location looked great but upon trying the panel in location was obvious had an issue with the location of the stairs to the berth deck. I moved them farther out but then realized the door locations had to be equivalent on the aft bulkhead for the connecting partition to work and, of course, they were now too far out. So....third time the charm and I got to an acceptable location:
The connecting panel was added and the trim work to allow them to connect. I added some preliminary trim pieces to check out the pattern I sought after, but it is still incomplete. The doors will not have windows added to them.
A final check required before the push to complete the panels was to add the other quarterdeck beams. I love it when a plan comes together:
Tonight the plan is to complete the trim pieces on all three panels, add solid 3/32" pieces of wood between the beams on the fore and aft piece for strength and a more finished look. The metalwork for the hinges and door knobs will be this weekend. Then the pieces get stored away until the cannon carriage bolts are affixed.
Not too much work, but a tremendous change in visual appeal.
-mark
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kruginmi got a reaction from Kevin in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
After a few more hours in the shop I managed to get the remaining windows complete and sanded to shape.
Even with all the templates there still was a few minor gaps that bugged me. After looking at the stern closely I realized the key was to remove the external planking between the windows and replace with some slightly larger to cover the initial window frames. Didn't take too much time to make this change. I still have not applied the gel coat to the new pieces which will make the finish much more uniform.
I did clean up the internal edges with some very thin molding pieces (though it will invisible to view).
-mark
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kruginmi got a reaction from Kevin in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
Thanks for looking.
Everyday I have tried to get something done in the workshop. Today was two items: one, the boxes for the steerage cables on their way up to the quarterdeck and two, finishing the bow wall planking.
For the cable boxes, I didn't want to use just a flat glue joint so I extended one side down into the floor planking:
The height of these boxes is equal to the size of the other coamings on the deck. Pretty straight forward but really cleans up the look.
The second item was another major milestone - completion of the bow wall planking (and thus - all of the gundeck planking).
Next up is more sanding, the stern window frames, the hinges for the stern lockers and then the bulkhead partitions.
-mark
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kruginmi got a reaction from Wishmaster in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
On to the bulkheads! The windows ended up being 66 different pieces of wood, it will be interesting to see how many pieces are used for these 3 panels.
The approach for the 3 panels (2 cross ship, one bow and aft connecting) was to use a 3 ply sandwich of 1/32" basswood, used on other builds in this forum. The middle piece is a solid piece of wood with the 2 other being trim pieces added to give the look of fancier paneling.
The initial form was defined through the use of cereal box cardboard. If any one needs that detail let me know, but needless to say it took around 3-4 iterations before I was satisfied (around a full size Cheerio box - hah, hah). Once I was satisfied with the fit I transferred to the basswood and cut out:
The panels were cut to fit under a defined deck beam, flush with the rear edge. You can see in the above photo the Legos used to help hold things up (another great idea from this forum). I then defined the doorway locations which required more effort than I thought. The original location looked great but upon trying the panel in location was obvious had an issue with the location of the stairs to the berth deck. I moved them farther out but then realized the door locations had to be equivalent on the aft bulkhead for the connecting partition to work and, of course, they were now too far out. So....third time the charm and I got to an acceptable location:
The connecting panel was added and the trim work to allow them to connect. I added some preliminary trim pieces to check out the pattern I sought after, but it is still incomplete. The doors will not have windows added to them.
A final check required before the push to complete the panels was to add the other quarterdeck beams. I love it when a plan comes together:
Tonight the plan is to complete the trim pieces on all three panels, add solid 3/32" pieces of wood between the beams on the fore and aft piece for strength and a more finished look. The metalwork for the hinges and door knobs will be this weekend. Then the pieces get stored away until the cannon carriage bolts are affixed.
Not too much work, but a tremendous change in visual appeal.
-mark
-
kruginmi got a reaction from 42rocker in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
On to the bulkheads! The windows ended up being 66 different pieces of wood, it will be interesting to see how many pieces are used for these 3 panels.
The approach for the 3 panels (2 cross ship, one bow and aft connecting) was to use a 3 ply sandwich of 1/32" basswood, used on other builds in this forum. The middle piece is a solid piece of wood with the 2 other being trim pieces added to give the look of fancier paneling.
The initial form was defined through the use of cereal box cardboard. If any one needs that detail let me know, but needless to say it took around 3-4 iterations before I was satisfied (around a full size Cheerio box - hah, hah). Once I was satisfied with the fit I transferred to the basswood and cut out:
The panels were cut to fit under a defined deck beam, flush with the rear edge. You can see in the above photo the Legos used to help hold things up (another great idea from this forum). I then defined the doorway locations which required more effort than I thought. The original location looked great but upon trying the panel in location was obvious had an issue with the location of the stairs to the berth deck. I moved them farther out but then realized the door locations had to be equivalent on the aft bulkhead for the connecting partition to work and, of course, they were now too far out. So....third time the charm and I got to an acceptable location:
The connecting panel was added and the trim work to allow them to connect. I added some preliminary trim pieces to check out the pattern I sought after, but it is still incomplete. The doors will not have windows added to them.
A final check required before the push to complete the panels was to add the other quarterdeck beams. I love it when a plan comes together:
Tonight the plan is to complete the trim pieces on all three panels, add solid 3/32" pieces of wood between the beams on the fore and aft piece for strength and a more finished look. The metalwork for the hinges and door knobs will be this weekend. Then the pieces get stored away until the cannon carriage bolts are affixed.
Not too much work, but a tremendous change in visual appeal.
-mark
-
kruginmi got a reaction from Maury S in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
On to the bulkheads! The windows ended up being 66 different pieces of wood, it will be interesting to see how many pieces are used for these 3 panels.
The approach for the 3 panels (2 cross ship, one bow and aft connecting) was to use a 3 ply sandwich of 1/32" basswood, used on other builds in this forum. The middle piece is a solid piece of wood with the 2 other being trim pieces added to give the look of fancier paneling.
The initial form was defined through the use of cereal box cardboard. If any one needs that detail let me know, but needless to say it took around 3-4 iterations before I was satisfied (around a full size Cheerio box - hah, hah). Once I was satisfied with the fit I transferred to the basswood and cut out:
The panels were cut to fit under a defined deck beam, flush with the rear edge. You can see in the above photo the Legos used to help hold things up (another great idea from this forum). I then defined the doorway locations which required more effort than I thought. The original location looked great but upon trying the panel in location was obvious had an issue with the location of the stairs to the berth deck. I moved them farther out but then realized the door locations had to be equivalent on the aft bulkhead for the connecting partition to work and, of course, they were now too far out. So....third time the charm and I got to an acceptable location:
The connecting panel was added and the trim work to allow them to connect. I added some preliminary trim pieces to check out the pattern I sought after, but it is still incomplete. The doors will not have windows added to them.
A final check required before the push to complete the panels was to add the other quarterdeck beams. I love it when a plan comes together:
Tonight the plan is to complete the trim pieces on all three panels, add solid 3/32" pieces of wood between the beams on the fore and aft piece for strength and a more finished look. The metalwork for the hinges and door knobs will be this weekend. Then the pieces get stored away until the cannon carriage bolts are affixed.
Not too much work, but a tremendous change in visual appeal.
-mark
-
kruginmi got a reaction from EdT in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
On to the bulkheads! The windows ended up being 66 different pieces of wood, it will be interesting to see how many pieces are used for these 3 panels.
The approach for the 3 panels (2 cross ship, one bow and aft connecting) was to use a 3 ply sandwich of 1/32" basswood, used on other builds in this forum. The middle piece is a solid piece of wood with the 2 other being trim pieces added to give the look of fancier paneling.
The initial form was defined through the use of cereal box cardboard. If any one needs that detail let me know, but needless to say it took around 3-4 iterations before I was satisfied (around a full size Cheerio box - hah, hah). Once I was satisfied with the fit I transferred to the basswood and cut out:
The panels were cut to fit under a defined deck beam, flush with the rear edge. You can see in the above photo the Legos used to help hold things up (another great idea from this forum). I then defined the doorway locations which required more effort than I thought. The original location looked great but upon trying the panel in location was obvious had an issue with the location of the stairs to the berth deck. I moved them farther out but then realized the door locations had to be equivalent on the aft bulkhead for the connecting partition to work and, of course, they were now too far out. So....third time the charm and I got to an acceptable location:
The connecting panel was added and the trim work to allow them to connect. I added some preliminary trim pieces to check out the pattern I sought after, but it is still incomplete. The doors will not have windows added to them.
A final check required before the push to complete the panels was to add the other quarterdeck beams. I love it when a plan comes together:
Tonight the plan is to complete the trim pieces on all three panels, add solid 3/32" pieces of wood between the beams on the fore and aft piece for strength and a more finished look. The metalwork for the hinges and door knobs will be this weekend. Then the pieces get stored away until the cannon carriage bolts are affixed.
Not too much work, but a tremendous change in visual appeal.
-mark
-
kruginmi got a reaction from Elmer Cornish in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
On to the bulkheads! The windows ended up being 66 different pieces of wood, it will be interesting to see how many pieces are used for these 3 panels.
The approach for the 3 panels (2 cross ship, one bow and aft connecting) was to use a 3 ply sandwich of 1/32" basswood, used on other builds in this forum. The middle piece is a solid piece of wood with the 2 other being trim pieces added to give the look of fancier paneling.
The initial form was defined through the use of cereal box cardboard. If any one needs that detail let me know, but needless to say it took around 3-4 iterations before I was satisfied (around a full size Cheerio box - hah, hah). Once I was satisfied with the fit I transferred to the basswood and cut out:
The panels were cut to fit under a defined deck beam, flush with the rear edge. You can see in the above photo the Legos used to help hold things up (another great idea from this forum). I then defined the doorway locations which required more effort than I thought. The original location looked great but upon trying the panel in location was obvious had an issue with the location of the stairs to the berth deck. I moved them farther out but then realized the door locations had to be equivalent on the aft bulkhead for the connecting partition to work and, of course, they were now too far out. So....third time the charm and I got to an acceptable location:
The connecting panel was added and the trim work to allow them to connect. I added some preliminary trim pieces to check out the pattern I sought after, but it is still incomplete. The doors will not have windows added to them.
A final check required before the push to complete the panels was to add the other quarterdeck beams. I love it when a plan comes together:
Tonight the plan is to complete the trim pieces on all three panels, add solid 3/32" pieces of wood between the beams on the fore and aft piece for strength and a more finished look. The metalwork for the hinges and door knobs will be this weekend. Then the pieces get stored away until the cannon carriage bolts are affixed.
Not too much work, but a tremendous change in visual appeal.
-mark
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kruginmi got a reaction from garyshipwright in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
On to the bulkheads! The windows ended up being 66 different pieces of wood, it will be interesting to see how many pieces are used for these 3 panels.
The approach for the 3 panels (2 cross ship, one bow and aft connecting) was to use a 3 ply sandwich of 1/32" basswood, used on other builds in this forum. The middle piece is a solid piece of wood with the 2 other being trim pieces added to give the look of fancier paneling.
The initial form was defined through the use of cereal box cardboard. If any one needs that detail let me know, but needless to say it took around 3-4 iterations before I was satisfied (around a full size Cheerio box - hah, hah). Once I was satisfied with the fit I transferred to the basswood and cut out:
The panels were cut to fit under a defined deck beam, flush with the rear edge. You can see in the above photo the Legos used to help hold things up (another great idea from this forum). I then defined the doorway locations which required more effort than I thought. The original location looked great but upon trying the panel in location was obvious had an issue with the location of the stairs to the berth deck. I moved them farther out but then realized the door locations had to be equivalent on the aft bulkhead for the connecting partition to work and, of course, they were now too far out. So....third time the charm and I got to an acceptable location:
The connecting panel was added and the trim work to allow them to connect. I added some preliminary trim pieces to check out the pattern I sought after, but it is still incomplete. The doors will not have windows added to them.
A final check required before the push to complete the panels was to add the other quarterdeck beams. I love it when a plan comes together:
Tonight the plan is to complete the trim pieces on all three panels, add solid 3/32" pieces of wood between the beams on the fore and aft piece for strength and a more finished look. The metalwork for the hinges and door knobs will be this weekend. Then the pieces get stored away until the cannon carriage bolts are affixed.
Not too much work, but a tremendous change in visual appeal.
-mark
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kruginmi got a reaction from daHeld in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
Greetings (again). Returning to MSW after a bit of off time (eg I just completed my 5th sprint triathlon). I have not been idle and have lately been kicking it into high gear with my version of the HMS Druid. Believe it or not, started in 2003 (two kids and a couple of homes ago) but looking to finish in the first quarter, 2014. I have loved every minute I have spent - probably a little over 300 hours so far.
I just finished with the bow assembly (sans the eking rail which will wait until the cathead is affixed). Previous to that was the stern caprail. I believe I am on the downhill of this build. Next up is finishing the rudder metal work and then working up from the berthdeck finishing all the details.
Additionally I have made progress on my Lady Anne and finished the DaVinci wing (currently on display at the Michigan Aviation Academy), but that will be a subject for another day.
Mark
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kruginmi got a reaction from Elmer Cornish in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
After a few more hours in the shop I managed to get the remaining windows complete and sanded to shape.
Even with all the templates there still was a few minor gaps that bugged me. After looking at the stern closely I realized the key was to remove the external planking between the windows and replace with some slightly larger to cover the initial window frames. Didn't take too much time to make this change. I still have not applied the gel coat to the new pieces which will make the finish much more uniform.
I did clean up the internal edges with some very thin molding pieces (though it will invisible to view).
-mark
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kruginmi got a reaction from SailorGreg in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
After a few more hours in the shop I managed to get the remaining windows complete and sanded to shape.
Even with all the templates there still was a few minor gaps that bugged me. After looking at the stern closely I realized the key was to remove the external planking between the windows and replace with some slightly larger to cover the initial window frames. Didn't take too much time to make this change. I still have not applied the gel coat to the new pieces which will make the finish much more uniform.
I did clean up the internal edges with some very thin molding pieces (though it will invisible to view).
-mark
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kruginmi reacted to robnbill in USS Constitution by robnbill (Bill) - FINISHED - Mamoli - 1:93 kit - First Build - Bashed
I started working on the ship's boats today. However, I also wanted to fix something that had been nagging at the back of my mind. I built binnacles for the deck based upon the photos from the ship and the AOS. They were not part of the Mamoli plans. However, when I finished them, I just brought them to a point. The photos have a rounded ball shape on top. I thought last night that I did get 1.6mm ball bearings that were too small for cannonballs, but were just about right for the binnacles. As luck would have it, I also had stained two of them black in my testing of the bearings for the cannonballs. So I used the Foredom to drill very small holes in the top (point) of each binnacle. I gradually increased the hole size until it was 1.25mm. Then I lightly sanded around the hole to level it a bit. Then a touch of thick CA, and dropped the darkened bearing on the hole. I like the way it turned out.
I also cut the forms out for the ships launch. I cut some walnut stops into 80mm lengths then split it in half. I put these into an ammonia/water solution to soften while I cut the forms out on the band saw. I took all of the forms and clamped them together so I could true the lines up. Then I glued the ends of the strips in the slots and bent them around the form, cut off the ends and glued the other ends into the opposite slot.
My plan is to cut a keel and notch it for the ribs. Then see how planking turns out. I am not betting that my first one will be a keeper, but I do think it will teach me a lot on what I do need to do to make the final boats.
Here are some shots of both the binnacles and the ribs in the forms as well as a shot o them all clamped together for truing.
Bill
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kruginmi reacted to dgbot in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
A couple of belts will steady your nerves. Great looking windows.
David B
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kruginmi got a reaction from mtaylor in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
After a few more hours in the shop I managed to get the remaining windows complete and sanded to shape.
Even with all the templates there still was a few minor gaps that bugged me. After looking at the stern closely I realized the key was to remove the external planking between the windows and replace with some slightly larger to cover the initial window frames. Didn't take too much time to make this change. I still have not applied the gel coat to the new pieces which will make the finish much more uniform.
I did clean up the internal edges with some very thin molding pieces (though it will invisible to view).
-mark
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kruginmi got a reaction from Kevin in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
With some time back on the ship I decided to tackle the manger. This was not on the plans but something I have thought about adding for a awhile (plan bashing?). This area is obscured but still can be seen if you are triple jointed (hah, hah).
I designed this on the fly and probably ended up with about two and a half hours total. I had several starts and stops but relaxed and finally evolved to a solution that I liked.
This is the view from the middle gun deck and what will be visible from the finished viewpoint.
For background, these temporary walls contain the slime and mud brought up on the anchor cables. Given the location and look it was a natural place for any animals (eg pigs, cattle) brought on board to be penned up - thus the name manger.
-mark
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kruginmi got a reaction from dvm27 in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
With some time back on the ship I decided to tackle the manger. This was not on the plans but something I have thought about adding for a awhile (plan bashing?). This area is obscured but still can be seen if you are triple jointed (hah, hah).
I designed this on the fly and probably ended up with about two and a half hours total. I had several starts and stops but relaxed and finally evolved to a solution that I liked.
This is the view from the middle gun deck and what will be visible from the finished viewpoint.
For background, these temporary walls contain the slime and mud brought up on the anchor cables. Given the location and look it was a natural place for any animals (eg pigs, cattle) brought on board to be penned up - thus the name manger.
-mark
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kruginmi got a reaction from Elmer Cornish in HMS Druid by Krug - FINISHED - 1:48 - Hahn
Thanks for looking.
Everyday I have tried to get something done in the workshop. Today was two items: one, the boxes for the steerage cables on their way up to the quarterdeck and two, finishing the bow wall planking.
For the cable boxes, I didn't want to use just a flat glue joint so I extended one side down into the floor planking:
The height of these boxes is equal to the size of the other coamings on the deck. Pretty straight forward but really cleans up the look.
The second item was another major milestone - completion of the bow wall planking (and thus - all of the gundeck planking).
Next up is more sanding, the stern window frames, the hinges for the stern lockers and then the bulkhead partitions.
-mark