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druxey

NRG Member
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Everything posted by druxey

  1. Nice presentation in the case, Ben. Congratulations on completing your 'fully framed' cross-section!
  2. Nice to know that you hadn't forgotten how to cut a neat dovetail! Sweet.
  3. Cheap rasps are a snare and delusion. Quality ones, cared for, will last you. (The same goes for any and all tools!)
  4. Very tricky, Ed! I'd have been tempted to do all this flat on the bench as a sub-assembly, but you are obviously a braver man than I. Well done.
  5. Now that is a major decision! Not many folk would get so far along, then decide to re-start. My hat off to you, mij.
  6. I've made wooden masters, used RTV (room temperature vulcanizing) rubber and cast using lead-free pewter. The molds were made as two-piece ones with all the details (vent field, trunnions) and reinforced by a two-piece dental plaster outer 'jacket'. This was for safety and because the rubber was quite soft and easily deformed. With a little experience, the results are great.
  7. If you are scratch building, its seems odd to want to buy cannon off-the-shelf! If you don't want to do repetitive turning, simply make a master of each variety and then make a mold. You can then cast all the cannon in the sizes that you need.
  8. Epoxy, before it sets up, can be removed using isopropanol or methanol.
  9. If it's British naval armament history and extreme detail you want, and have deep pockets, the two volumes by Adrian Caruana are the ultimate in this field.
  10. Nice work, Ben. But, as Greg says, there's more, if you want it!
  11. The wedges need to be cut with the edges radiating from the axis. So, glue up the sections with the points meeting at the axis. Your prototype will only make "Go home, barrel - you're drunk."
  12. Donna and Jim: you both make a great team! Thanks again for the service and machines that you provide us with. And if you're embarrassed, so be it.
  13. Let's hope that it was your last motorcycle crash, Bruce! Nice set-up you have there, complete with Wallace and Gromit, I see.
  14. With all due respect, I doubt that the rudder was painted white. In the William Smyth painting that you cite, I think it more likely the effect of light makes the rudder appear to be white.
  15. Those bitts will never move anywhere under the strain of the cables when anchored! Well done: I don't think I've seen this detail in a model before.
  16. It's nice to see the subtly changing hull form beginning to appear, Ed.
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