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Everything posted by mtaylor
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HMS Swift kit - planking
mtaylor replied to redwards's topic in Building, Framing, Planking and plating a ships hull and deck
If you use the soak and bend, let them dry completely before installing them in place. Eric is right... they will shrink. -
Mike, If it's just plans showing the internals, etc., the "Anatomy of a Ship" books are very good. There's also Lavery's "Arming and Fitting of English Ships of War 1600-1815" There's others with some very deep coverage including plans and building instructions such as Antscherl's "The Fully Framed Model: Swan Class Sloops", Ed Tosti's "Naiad" and Yedlinksy's "HMS Euryalus". Seawatch Books has these and others. For French Ships, there's ANCRE and all their related books. Basically, you spend large piles of money on books....
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HMS Swift kit - planking
mtaylor replied to redwards's topic in Building, Framing, Planking and plating a ships hull and deck
Try adding heat. Boiling water or use a curling iron or heated plank bender. I moved this to the planking forum. Check for the posts on bending wood as we've had a lot of them. -
Don, Great work on the blocks. If you're going to do a lot of mouldings or blocks, I'd suggest using an old hacksaw blade and use it to make scrapers. The aluminum will lose it's edge pretty quick.
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Grant, Those are some serious tools. I'm hoping they're for more than a few ship's boats. I'm following your boats with interest as I've got a couple of these tiny things to do myself at some point...
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Cutty Sark by NenadM
mtaylor replied to NenadM's topic in - Build logs for subjects built 1851 - 1900
Nenad, I'll jump early also... HAPPY BIRTHDAY!!!!! May you have great cake, , excellent beverages and all the time you want with Her Majesty. Lastly, may the spice keep flowing.- 4,152 replies
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Pops, When you hit that point, do some testing... the 50-50 mix of white glue and water works well, as does matte lacquer, and fabric glue. It's all about what you feel most comfortable with.
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Cutty Sark by NenadM
mtaylor replied to NenadM's topic in - Build logs for subjects built 1851 - 1900
When in doubt, cheat. Hang a piece of painted wood in front of the cabling. Hides the cable, makes the Admiral happy.. and it's relatively easy and cheap.- 4,152 replies
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Don't use India Ink. Use artist's pigment from an art store. It's powdered. Mix a small amount (very small) with a bit of water to make a slurry and then mix it with a bottle of glue. EdT explains it here: http://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/topic/3453-young-america-by-edt-extreme-clipper-1853/?p=120375
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Bulkhead posts
mtaylor replied to Guybrarian's topic in Building, Framing, Planking and plating a ships hull and deck
Just curious what the plans show or the instructions say? Any pictures that show the finished build? Some builds have you remove them, others have you lay in more planks to simulate the frames. If they stay and you add more, do plank between them. -
A nice save.... One way around the paper problem is to punch many small holes in the paper so the glue can soak through to the other side. I forget who's doing it, but they are using black tissue paper. The paper is thin enough to allow the glue to soak through. Another way is color the glue. EdT talks about this in his Naiad log and it works as have tinted a bottle of Elmer's wood glue and it works very well.
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I'll just add my congratulations and admiration since all the superlatives have been taken. Just magnificent, Grant.
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Piet, Looks like a great sub-project (pun intended). Just make sure it's strong enough to support the torpedo. As for you being a magician... nah... you're our resident wizard.
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Pops, Your log is in the right place. I guessing someone moved it. As for "bold"... the only time the title is in bold is for a topic you haven't read, or one with posts you haven't read. Pick and choose what to read at your leisure..
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Just one word from me, Denis... WOW!!!!!
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Matti, Looking better than ever. What Nigel said about a cover up is a good idea. I've done a similar thing and recommend it.
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Time to start giving hints, Kevin.
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Short answer... no. 1/4 scale is equal to 1:48 in that 1inch = 4 feet = 48 inches of the real thing.
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Jason, If you read through the logs, all kits have issues. Some with quality, some with amounts. Hang in there.
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