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druxey

NRG Member
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Everything posted by druxey

  1. Is this 'false deck' in one piece and of plywood?
  2. Interesting technique for minimizing CA glue issues with your bolts.
  3. Look like you fitted the garboard very neatly, especially the tricky bit at the bow.
  4. Beautiful replicas, Siggi. Not much use without a frizzen for your flint! I'm looking forward to your next maritime subject. Soon, I hope.
  5. I'm sorry to read of your health issues, Hellmut. I hope that the medical community can stabilize things and that you will continue to recover without further cerebro-vascular problems. Best wishes as you recuperate.
  6. With such an extreme 'apple cheek' bow drop planks will be inevitable. Laying out where they should come will be fun!
  7. Les; thank you for the reminder. You'll find regular safety warnings in various threads when the subjects of flammables, VOC's, particulates or other hazards come up. However, an extra 'safety' thread would not be amiss!
  8. Ed Marple's models, while beautifully made, may not be entirely historically accurate. I'd rely more on primary sources such as van de Velde.
  9. Plain or hooked scarphs in the horizontal way would be appropriate.
  10. This is a standard we can all aspire to!
  11. A custom shaped mold would be the best way to go. I've used Silkspan, wetted and stretched on a frame like watercolor paper. I then washed it white dilute acrylic to get a 'canvas' color. After putting in a backing inside the frame to support the material I 'drew' the lines of the seams on with paint and a ruling pen. When dry, I added all the reinforcements using dilute acrylic medium. (This, unlike white glue, will not dissolve when wetted.) When wetted down after removing from the frame, the material can be molded, then 'set' with more dilute matte medium. Make sure there is some form of mold release, though!
  12. The dog ate your homework? Not an original excuse, I'm afraid. Compound curves are a challenge. Had you considered molding a large piece of soaked SilkSpan and then adding the seams and reinforcements when dry?
  13. Delighted to see you return, Doris. That will be a rather large model! Looking forward to seeing your progress on this beauty.
  14. Rendering looks great, but there are some details that are inaccurate. (I'm sure it is your sources, not your error!) One, the shot locker lids extend the whole width of the lockers. They are not like port lids. Check out any Swan class build or Naiad and you'll see how this is done. The boards over the limber channels are in short lengths with finger holes for lifiting them. Inside the well is open to the limber channels, not planked in. The well door probably had some ventilation holes bored through, (as would the various platform doors, if they did not have bar or lattice vents). Hope this helps you.
  15. Looking good so far, Toni! It's amazing how many scraper profiles are needed. However, once you've cut them, you can use them over and over on subsequent models!
  16. Manual lofting is a tedious process. However, once you get into the rhythm of it, it can go fairly quickly. I've been doing it this way for years. These days I loft manually, scan and clean up the drawings on computer. Sample attached.
  17. Theoretically the curves are composed of arcs of circles. However, in practice this is not the case the further ones moves forward and aft of the dead flat frame....
  18. The gangway was normally flush to the planksheer at this time period. Nice progress, Toni!
  19. Hmm.... Seems like a stretch to me. Sure it is an early anchor but, as they were hard to produce and expensive, might have been in use well into the following century before being lost. Unless there is a log stating that an anchor of that size was lost in that location by one of Columbus' ships, I remain sceptical!
  20. Cracking in acrylic might be stress-induced by the bolts being over-tightened?
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