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rlb

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Posts posted by rlb

  1. Thanks Rick.

     

    Continuing with rough shaping of the Bollard and Hawse timbers, they are glued together, and sanded.  After they are close to the right shape, they will be separated and will be filed to form the correct gaps between them.  To the left, the first cant frame "Z (Forward)" is also cut out--616877013_Euryalus20220612ABollardAssembly.JPG.3997f3cfb763c4cd036b3c507167e327.JPG

     

    The second cant frame "Z (After)" is made up of two pieces each, with a chock.  This is my first time building a chocked frame, and the chocks need to be skewed to accommodate the inner and outer bevels of the frame--

    1374152531_Euryalus20220612BFirstFrameAssembly.JPG.b094a5686e2b32e497edc867da8940d3.JPG

     

      The skewed chock is made oversize and glued to the first piece--

    130649753_Euryalus20220612CSkewedChock.JPG.5ae6e16251e10e1f204612316eb92f57.JPG

     

    Then it is sanded flush on the side without the paper pattern--

    991194748_Euryalus20220612DSkewedChockSanded.JPG.998d90cc5f8d4edec567cffd3e3789e5.JPG

     

    Here are the frames with the second piece ready to be glued.  However, I discovered that the upper starboard futtock (the one on the left in the photo) is misshapen.  The paper pattern became distorted when I glued it down.  I had had to lift and reposition it on the wood billet, and during that process it warped.  I will need to make some more paper copies, and cut another one--371219852_Euryalus20220612EZAFrame.JPG.377072f475dbf5753ae9398ebc742c73.JPG

     

     

    Ron

     

     

     

  2. Thank you cisco.  Thank you, Johann--your model is extraordinary, and I can only aspire to the accuracy and detail that you are able to accomplish!

     

    I have been working--very slowly.

     

    First, I realized that I need to remove the carronades to make the breeching ropes.  Unfortunately, I had glued them to the deck!!  Fortune smiled though, and the upper part of the carriages were NOT glued to the lower bed (except for one), and I was able to remove the carronades--

    838247116_Oneida20220508AEmptyCarronades.JPG.c1aa80077238e36f6876757430ae2496.JPG 

     

    Here they are, with breeching ropes partly done.  They need to have the correct knot and iron ring attached to each end of the rope.  The first five (including the one carronade that I had to forcibly remove from the deck) are done.  Beyond those are the rest which have the first end done, then the line threaded through the breeching ring, and the beginning loop of the second knot lightly glued to hold it for seizing--

    703794259_Oneida20220508BBreechingRopes.JPG.d9164749bd0f980aa4fed3e2ef6131f4.JPG

     

    This is my method for completing the breeching knot after the first seizing is done.  Using a short piece of line, and tweezers, form a simple overhand knot--

     

    1454179683_Oneida20220508BBreechingRopesTie1.JPG.9d74cf95fd637ab7993aeed053af6af4.JPG

    Get it oriented correctly--

    555023960_Oneida20220508DBreechingRopesTie2.JPG.4420e39bcfa2e960a81364389cf25e71.JPG

    Position it at the right spot and pull it tighter--

    1239823550_Oneida20220508EBreechingRopesTie3.JPG.ee48e8bf69039f96d41f70ecf6e3f480.JPG

    Finish up by giving it a good tug--

    488217860_Oneida20220508FBreechingRopesTie4.JPG.13021af5e5a6294e8a694d15fcc4cb7b.JPG

     

    The loose ends are then wrapped a turn around, and glued with a dab of white glue.  After dry, the ends are snipped close.  It's a shortcut, I know, but looks fine.

     

    Now the carronades can be reinstalled, and the eyelets glued into predrilled holes (done many years ago now!!) in the bulwarks--

     

    1257367134_Oneida20220508GCarronadesreplaced.JPG.22504d5a97f17e97c2f29071de90b7c4.JPG

    940677864_Oneida20220508HCarronadesreplaced2.JPG.83cc96b7eac0a48311a264d0a069db97.JPG

    1518165662_Oneida20220508ICarronadesreplaced3.JPG.ef345cb71dfec90c2b02a0bd330d4ea4.JPG

     

    Next, I will need to make about 30 more of these training tackles--

    497693186_Oneida20220508JTrainingTackle.JPG.fe256c2f93736ec9d3f0df6c90e59c1e.JPG

     

    Closing with a couple photos of Oneida--

    625638496_Oneida20220508KOverall1.JPG.0c24480bd883f559e07dfe5604c5865f.JPG

    267691704_Oneida20220508LOverall2.JPG.67c1cf40ac16a5944a414c2a12d4d98c.JPG

     

    Ron

     

     

     

  3. Thanks all for looking in, comments, and hitting the like.  

     

    Continuing with the rudder work, here are the rudder chains, and tiller parts--

     

    268190246_Oneida20220205ATiller.JPG.18400e21b2b85080b26417fdfc4b45d2.JPG

     

     

    The chains are test for the length and drape--

     

    73740896_Oneida20220205BRudderChainFit.JPG.d6b68d29134fe4c0ad3feb63a14f2cc4.JPG

     

     

    And after blackening, attached--

     

    22015809_Oneida20220205CRudderChains.JPG.63069a8cbd5c1bd7b816e02441936cf9.JPG

     

     

    I cringe at the poor planking of the transom (some shrinkage gaps), and my less-than-precise painting!

     

    After gluing the tiller to the rudder head, I realized I need to drill some holes for eyebolts for the tiller rope.  Of course, this should have been done before gluing the tiller on--

     

    83619229_Oneida20220205DTillerDrilling.JPG.f05c3f5eae1b0741917efd981eca3ad1.JPG

     

     

    Here are the eyebolts and tiller ropes attached--

     

    691232692_Oneida20220205ETillerRope1.JPG.a28d7857e2288de3996a81b624a35fbe.JPG

     

     

    Then threaded through the blocks on the bulwarks, and back through the blocks on the tiller--

     

    1180059805_Oneida20220205FTillerRope2.JPG.663e849eb09743dfd91dfc6a96f8985d.JPG

     

     

    Ah, but what to do with the loose ends?   In the Charles G. Davis illustration that I followed for this, the ropes go to a ship's wheel.  But there is no wheel in this case.  I reasoned that there should be cleats on the bulwarks to fasten the ropes to.  These had to be added--

     

    1625904841_Oneida20220205GTillerRope3.JPG.9d2615b0788f7b8618f929f6354a346f.JPG

     

     

    I'm not sure why Lieutenant Woolsey decided to take a nap during this work.  Maybe he overindulged last night.

     

    After tying the rope off to the cleat, a rough coil was made by wrapping the rope (wet with diluted PVA) around a drill bit--

     

    174992188_Oneida20220205ITillerRope5.JPG.1f556c2409a679ac5b665d4b3448eba7.JPG

     

     

    This was draped over the cleat, with much massaging and rewetting, to try and get it to hang sort of realistically--

     

    694500642_Oneida20220205JTillerRope6.JPG.072ac82086642c528d53dc819ea03069.JPG

     

    1573210188_Oneida20220205KTillerRope7.JPG.616548fc9c83004aa86faece5ff39725.JPG

     

     

    After finishing this (of course), I remembered that one of Bernard Frolich's brig models with a tiller may have shown me what to do here.   I checked, and yes, there are cleats on the bulwarks.  However, the arrangement of the blocks and rope is a little different, and it looks functionally superior to what I did.    

     

    Here is yours truly working--

     

    689550834_Oneida20220205LWorking.JPG.38416bab163ad99c1996453cdaca97dc.JPG

     

     

    Ron

  4. I'm not sure if anyone can help, but 6-9 months ago, someone posted their method for stropping an eyehook to a block that looked miles better than the frustrating, fiddly way I was doing it.  There was some sort of looping knot that they started with.  I thought I copied the page, or the instructions, or saved an image, but I can't seem to find anything now.  I'd be interested to see how you do it, or if you know what I'm talking about, before I start down the road of doing about 60 of these.

     

    Thanks for any help,

    Ron   

  5. Thank you, Roger.

     

    Some activity in the shipyard!!

     

    Euryalus has left my living room and has come upstairs to join Oneida in the workshop.  This displaces Oneida to a smaller area, but I think that will be okay--

     

    613093293_Oneida20220123Aworkshop.JPG.40afddc1130e28307849daeca772ea5a.JPG

     

     

    The carronades have been glued in place--

     

    148410449_Oneida20220123DCarronadeside.JPG.66168ece5bec63c50fb5f7aea84e7015.JPG

     

    620751607_Oneida20220123CCarronadequarter.JPG.71e80eecf282b80c110e3499c11d3193.JPG

     

    691199028_Oneida20220123BCarronadeclose.JPG.9a005c43c4103c6ee9d34c5a39a6fe74.JPG

     

     

    Next, they will all be "stowage rigged" as the one third from the right on the starboard side in the photo.  I just have to remember how I did that one--about 10 years ago.

     

    The rudder has been glued on--

     

    1852825730_Oneida20220123ERudderglue.JPG.2759298702af1a106998715e50c4d426.JPG

     

    1884231137_Oneida20220123FRudderglued.JPG.d2000f0c59c6b3e74c6c859007ea0d35.JPG

     

     

     

    That's all for now,

    Ron

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