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Posted

druxey --

thank you!!!

the English  ~50' vessel of interest was built c.1630.

the modern representation being built has 3 [p/s] cant frames at the bow.

other than being a pain to model i wondered about the timing from a historical perspective.

transverse frames would have been easier for me, but i guess better for the real shipwrights.

now off to deal with the wales.

ed

 

Posted

No cant frames were used in English shipbuilding in the 1630's, Ed.

 

Modern 'replicas' are usually not exactly that; usually headroom is increased, modern nav equipment, flushing heads, small auxiliary diesel engines and a prop fitted, etc. Also modern safety regulations apply!

 

One silly example recently was Bluenose II. She was being restored (the ship is a replica of the original Bluenose) and re-fitted. Current regulations insisted on a steel rudder so, at great expense, one was made and fitted. She proved unmanageable due to the weight so the wooden rudder had to reinstalled.

Be sure to sign up for an epic Nelson/Trafalgar project if you would like to see it made into a TV series  http://trafalgar.tv

Posted

druxey --

 

kind of figured all of that - just was not sure - thanks for clarification.

vessel is being built to both lloyds and uscg specs so architect/designer has lots of hoops to clear.

thanks.

ed

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