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Flying Fish by gak1965 - FINISHED - Model Shipways - 1:96


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1 hour ago, ClipperFan said:

our family lived in Würzburg, West Germany.

I was stationed in Wildflecken Germany (168 Armor Battalion) ....minutes from the EGB.  We were there when the wall came down(I have my piece).....we were there for the *Unification day*...what an adventure.  We lived among the history.  Now it's nothing but a memory.

 

Rob

Current build:

Build log: https://modelshipworld.com/topic/25382-glory-of-the-seas-medium-clipper-1869-by-rwiederrich-196

 

 

Finished build:

Build log: of 1/128th Great Republic: http://modelshipworld.com/index.php/topic/13740-great-republic-by-rwiederrich-four-masted-extreme-clipper-1853/#

 

Current build(On hold):

Build log: 1/96  Donald McKay:http://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/topic/4522-donald-mckay-medium-clipper-by-rwiederrich-1855/

 

Completed build:  http://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/gallery/album/475-196-cutty-sark-plastic/

The LORD said, "See, I have set (them) aside...with skills of all kinds, to make artistic designs for work in gold, silver, and bronze, to cut and set stones, to work in wood, and to engage in all kinds of crafts."

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On 7/22/2022 at 8:53 AM, rwiederrich said:

I was stationed in Wildflecken Germany (168 Armor Battalion) ....minutes from the EGB.  We were there when the wall came down(I have my piece).....we were there for the *Unification day*...what an adventure.  We lived among the history.  Now it's nothing but a memory.

 

Rob

Rob, I googled the distance from Würzburg to Wildflecken. 40 miles due north. From what could read your location was right on the East German border. I for one, am grateful the entire structure, all of it is consigned to the dust bowl of History. Thank you for your service, by the way.

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On 7/24/2022 at 9:40 AM, ClipperFan said:

Rob, I googled the distance from Würzburg to Wildflecken. 40 miles due north. From what could read your location was right on the East German border. I for one, am grateful the entire structure, all of it is consigned to the dust bowl of History. Thank you for your service, by the way.

Wildflecken wasn't right on the border...our AO was, and it extended down the Fulda Gap toward Fulda.  We stared at East Germans all the time during our duties.  We were the front line defense against any EG or Soviet aggression in that sector.  Geographically...it was their only way to advance West..

 

Thanks....it was an *Adventure*.....

 

Rob

Current build:

Build log: https://modelshipworld.com/topic/25382-glory-of-the-seas-medium-clipper-1869-by-rwiederrich-196

 

 

Finished build:

Build log: of 1/128th Great Republic: http://modelshipworld.com/index.php/topic/13740-great-republic-by-rwiederrich-four-masted-extreme-clipper-1853/#

 

Current build(On hold):

Build log: 1/96  Donald McKay:http://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/topic/4522-donald-mckay-medium-clipper-by-rwiederrich-1855/

 

Completed build:  http://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/gallery/album/475-196-cutty-sark-plastic/

The LORD said, "See, I have set (them) aside...with skills of all kinds, to make artistic designs for work in gold, silver, and bronze, to cut and set stones, to work in wood, and to engage in all kinds of crafts."

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Well, back to the topgallant masts. Each of the previous failures taught me something, the most important was probably that I was not going to be able to use anything other than sandpaper to shape the topgallant masts, that the birch dowels at that length/thickness were not going to be successfully shaped with my cutting tools on the lathe. So, 100 grit paper to get the approximate shape, and 220 to finish it off, I managed to make the following (I did use  a pointed cutting tool to square the ends). My goal was to properly capture the stepping of the mast (key to successfully mounting the stays) and I think that i did that:

 

IMG_20220724_172440704.thumb.jpg.cf86b04a23a0ccae7a77d9814e502272.jpg

 

Here are two other views, the first sitting next to the diagram (this is for the main - which is what is shown in the diagram. All the penciled in numbers are just my conversion of the sizes of the real masts into mm)

 

IMG_20220724_172621961.thumb.jpg.24f381e7c698858d5657cb9e1131802d.jpg

 

And the second of the piece before I cut the ends off:

 

IMG_20220724_172629426.thumb.jpg.4e0003ae1dab929a0567c0b7dc59abaa.jpg

 

The Tamia tape on the right side of the picture was just to increase the diameter so that it would fit properly in the collet.  I squared the foot of the mast to fit into the appropriate location in the trestle trees, drilled holes for the halyards, and then expanded the size of the hole in the topmast caps, and then trimmed the topmasts to accept the square hole in the cap, and voila, one (partly finished) mast! A couple of views of the mast below, looking directly aft:

 

IMG_20220727_224915236.thumb.jpg.c6968a1ff4a6905f9fc3f79ae7f8d57c.jpg

 

And looking from the port side, in profile, as it were:

 

 

 

IMG_20220727_224953652.thumb.jpg.b8de3f574baf8c6bffa06ee8e9cec143.jpg

 

And a view from the port side with the mast (precariously balanced, and the topgallant leaning slightly aft because it isn't glued in place) on the ship:

 

IMG_20220727_225037826.thumb.jpg.84b827d880010d35748a18ed744ad6ef.jpg

 

Although the plans suggest that the whole mast above the tops should be bright (with the exception of a gilded ball on the truck) the Butterfield painting shows the topmast from (and including) the trestletrees to the cap in white, with the foot of the topgallant also white to the point where it passes through the cap. I don't really see the spreaders in the painting, but I assume that they too are white. So, first stain on the mast itself, followed by some white paint, at which point I can call the spars on the mainmast done.

 

Moving forward, I will need to scratch build a cap for the fore mast as I broke one of the two same-sized caps widening the round opening. That's no big deal, I think that all of the caps on the Niagara (and 1/4 of the ones on the Fish) were scratch built because I had a tendency to break them opening out holes. Good practice for the eventual RRS Discovery (1901) scratch build.

 

This feels like something of a milestone. I'll say this much, the ship is going to take an enormous case, particularly vertically. Somehow paintings don't really give you a feeling for how much sail these things must have carried but when you see just how high the masts go versus the length of the ship - that drives it home. 

 

As always, thanks for looking in.

 

Regards,

George K

 

 

Edited by gak1965

Current Builds: Bluejacket USS KearsargeRRS Discovery 1:72 scratch

Completed Builds: Model Shipways 1:96 Flying Fish | Model Shipways 1:64 US Brig Niagara | Model Shipways 1:64 Pride of Baltimore II (modified) | Midwest Muscongus Bay Lobster Smack | Heller 1:150 Passat | Revell 1:96 USS Constitution

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On 7/26/2022 at 8:28 AM, rwiederrich said:

We stared at East Germans all the time during our duties.  We were the front line defense against any EG or Soviet aggression in that sector.  Geographically...it was their only way to advance West..

 

Yeah. I was on USS Peterson (DD-969) as a midshipman. In the summer of '84 we were with a small Marine battle group (Nassau, Ponce, Saginaw) off the coast of Beirut. Periodically other NATO/aligned ships would join for a time, but the Soviets always kept a Krivak around. We watched them, they watched us. One day, we got a good look at them when one of the trash bags didn't sink, and the Krivak immediately put on steam and picked up the bag.

 

Krivak.thumb.png.eb805da51d0a1b14301252299d0980b9.png

 

Hard to see from here, but it follows the identification slang for a Krivak (Hot dog pack, Smokestack, Knife in the Back, two Guns in the Back), the hot dog pack being the quad launcher for SS-N-14 Silex anti-ship/anti-submarine missiles. As it happens, some of the sailors on the Pete had filled one bag with, ah, unpleasant materials, and intentionally not weighed it down. Childish, I know.

 

For reference, "Pete" with USS Biddle (CG-34) in the background, later, in Marseille (apologies for the quality, they are scanned prints).

 

154559530_PeteBelknapMarseilles.thumb.png.9dcee63c6672553c78113066b2416987.png

 

@ClipperFan or @rwiederrich, I don't know if you've been back behind what used to be the curtain, but it can be really weird for anyone that lived through the Cold War. I was in Kyiv back in 2008 and I visited what is now called the "National Museum of the History of Ukraine in the Second World War" but what was then the "Museum of the Great Patriotic War". They had a display of hardware outside the museum, but in addition to the WWII stuff, there was a bunch of Cold War equipment there as well. Two representative snaps below - an Mi-24 Hind helo and an R-12 Dvina IRBM with the Rodina Mat (Батьківщина-Мати) in the frame as well. As you can imagine it was weird looking at the stuff the Soviets were aiming at us as a display that families came to look at when they visited the memorial and park, and the shield of the Rodina Mat still has the seal of the USSR on it (my understanding is that the Ukrainians want to remove the hammer and sickle, but it's a big job and frankly they have other things on their mind right now).

 

1629326027_Kiev088.thumb.jpg.ebeceb9a5314debe2b928207b99cff9c.jpg

 

DSC_0082.thumb.JPG.ff3a9d2e5aadab6eb0e402ca1caf59ed.JPG

 

I assume it's just as weird for people who were in Warsaw Pact service who visit the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum (especially the Udvar-Hazy Center) which has an SR-71 spy plane and Cold War fighters and things like Poseidon missiles (and some Soviet stuff as well).

 

When I was walking around Kyiv I wondered if anyone there had been assigned to the Black Sea Fleet back in '84, their HQ was obviously in Sevastopol in the then Ukrainian SSR. 

 

George

Edited by gak1965

Current Builds: Bluejacket USS KearsargeRRS Discovery 1:72 scratch

Completed Builds: Model Shipways 1:96 Flying Fish | Model Shipways 1:64 US Brig Niagara | Model Shipways 1:64 Pride of Baltimore II (modified) | Midwest Muscongus Bay Lobster Smack | Heller 1:150 Passat | Revell 1:96 USS Constitution

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George,

the masts look incredible. I am looking at a Sherline lathe and everytime I see another great post like yours I inch closer to the 'put in cart' button. 😃

 

I bet the Ukrainians will get plenty of offers to help remove that hammer and sickle when this mess is over.... 

 

Brian

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12 hours ago, gak1965 said:

This feels like something of a milestone. I'll say this much, the ship is going to take an enormous case, particularly vertically. Somehow paintings don't really give you a feeling for how much sail these things must have carried but when you see just how high the masts go versus the length of the ship - that drives it home. 

Great job George....a *Milestone* it is.  I remember when I finished  all my masts for Great Republic...not to mention the Glory of the Seas.   You've transitioned from a structure to rigging.  The hull is one structure...the masting is another.   Now tapering and rigging each yard will be all together *another* structure.   I'd say you've completed about 1/3 of your build, that much closer to completion.

Super  job.

 

Rob

 

 

Edited by rwiederrich

Current build:

Build log: https://modelshipworld.com/topic/25382-glory-of-the-seas-medium-clipper-1869-by-rwiederrich-196

 

 

Finished build:

Build log: of 1/128th Great Republic: http://modelshipworld.com/index.php/topic/13740-great-republic-by-rwiederrich-four-masted-extreme-clipper-1853/#

 

Current build(On hold):

Build log: 1/96  Donald McKay:http://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/topic/4522-donald-mckay-medium-clipper-by-rwiederrich-1855/

 

Completed build:  http://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/gallery/album/475-196-cutty-sark-plastic/

The LORD said, "See, I have set (them) aside...with skills of all kinds, to make artistic designs for work in gold, silver, and bronze, to cut and set stones, to work in wood, and to engage in all kinds of crafts."

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On 7/27/2022 at 11:40 PM, gak1965 said:

Well, back to the topgallant masts. Each of the previous failures taught me something, the most important was probably that I was not going to be able to use anything other than sandpaper to shape the topgallant masts, that the birch dowels at that length/thickness were not going to be successfully shaped with my cutting tools on the lathe. So, 100 grit paper to get the approximate shape, and 220 to finish it off, I managed to make the following (I did use  a pointed cutting tool to square the ends). My goal was to properly capture the stepping of the mast (key to successfully mounting the stays) and I think that i did that:

 

IMG_20220724_172440704.thumb.jpg.cf86b04a23a0ccae7a77d9814e502272.jpg

 

Here are two other views, the first sitting next to the diagram (this is for the main - which is what is shown in the diagram. All the penciled in numbers are just my conversion of the sizes of the real masts into mm)

 

IMG_20220724_172621961.thumb.jpg.24f381e7c698858d5657cb9e1131802d.jpg

 

And the second of the piece before I cut the ends off:

 

IMG_20220724_172629426.thumb.jpg.4e0003ae1dab929a0567c0b7dc59abaa.jpg

 

The Tamia tape on the right side of the picture was just to increase the diameter so that it would fit properly in the collet.  I squared the foot of the mast to fit into the appropriate location in the trestle trees, drilled holes for the halyards, and then expanded the size of the hole in the topmast caps, and then trimmed the topmasts to accept the square hole in the cap, and voila, one (partly finished) mast! A couple of views of the mast below, looking directly aft:

 

IMG_20220727_224915236.thumb.jpg.c6968a1ff4a6905f9fc3f79ae7f8d57c.jpg

 

And looking from the port side, in profile, as it were:

 

 

 

IMG_20220727_224953652.thumb.jpg.b8de3f574baf8c6bffa06ee8e9cec143.jpg

 

And a view from the port side with the mast (precariously balanced, and the topgallant leaning slightly aft because it isn't glued in place) on the ship:

 

IMG_20220727_225037826.thumb.jpg.84b827d880010d35748a18ed744ad6ef.jpg

 

Although the plans suggest that the whole mast above the tops should be bright (with the exception of a gilded ball on the truck) the Butterfield painting shows the topmast from (and including) the trestletrees to the cap in white, with the foot of the topgallant also white to the point where it passes through the cap. I don't really see the spreaders in the painting, but I assume that they too are white. So, first stain on the mast itself, followed by some white paint, at which point I can call the spars on the mainmast done.

 

Moving forward, I will need to scratch build a cap for the fore mast as I broke one of the two same-sized caps widening the round opening. That's no big deal, I think that all of the caps on the Niagara (and 1/4 of the ones on the Fish) were scratch built because I had a tendency to break them opening out holes. Good practice for the eventual RRS Discovery (1901) scratch build.

 

This feels like something of a milestone. I'll say this much, the ship is going to take an enormous case, particularly vertically. Somehow paintings don't really give you a feeling for how much sail these things must have carried but when you see just how high the masts go versus the length of the ship - that drives it home. 

 

As always, thanks for looking in.

 

Regards,

George K

 

 

George K, I call the abilities you display to scratchbuild such beautifully balanced masts a unique form of artisan craftsmanship. The single image of the main mast stepped in your Flying Fish really drives home how incredibly lofty these McKay Clippers really were. I'm looking forward to your further progress.

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On 7/28/2022 at 12:39 AM, gak1965 said:

 

Yeah. I was on USS Peterson (DD-969) as a midshipman. In the summer of '84 we were with a small Marine battle group (Nassau, Ponce, Saginaw) off the coast of Beirut. Periodically other NATO/aligned ships would join for a time, but the Soviets always kept a Krivak around. We watched them, they watched us. One day, we got a good look at them when one of the trash bags didn't sink, and the Krivak immediately put on steam and picked up the bag.

 

Krivak.thumb.png.eb805da51d0a1b14301252299d0980b9.png

 

Hard to see from here, but it follows the identification slang for a Krivak (Hot dog pack, Smokestack, Knife in the Back, two Guns in the Back), the hot dog pack being the quad launcher for SS-N-14 Silex anti-ship/anti-submarine missiles. As it happens, some of the sailors on the Pete had filled one bag with, ah, unpleasant materials, and intentionally not weighed it down. Childish, I know.

 

For reference, "Pete" with USS Biddle (CG-34) in the background, later, in Marseille (apologies for the quality, they are scanned prints).

 

154559530_PeteBelknapMarseilles.thumb.png.9dcee63c6672553c78113066b2416987.png

 

@ClipperFan or @rwiederrich, I don't know if you've been back behind what used to be the curtain, but it can be really weird for anyone that lived through the Cold War. I was in Kyiv back in 2008 and I visited what is now called the "National Museum of the History of Ukraine in the Second World War" but what was then the "Museum of the Great Patriotic War". They had a display of hardware outside the museum, but in addition to the WWII stuff, there was a bunch of Cold War equipment there as well. Two representative snaps below - an Mi-24 Hind helo and an R-12 Dvina IRBM with the Rodina Mat (Батьківщина-Мати) in the frame as well. As you can imagine it was weird looking at the stuff the Soviets were aiming at us as a display that families came to look at when they visited the memorial and park, and the shield of the Rodina Mat still has the seal of the USSR on it (my understanding is that the Ukrainians want to remove the hammer and sickle, but it's a big job and frankly they have other things on their mind right now).

 

1629326027_Kiev088.thumb.jpg.ebeceb9a5314debe2b928207b99cff9c.jpg

 

DSC_0082.thumb.JPG.ff3a9d2e5aadab6eb0e402ca1caf59ed.JPG

 

I assume it's just as weird for people who were in Warsaw Pact service who visit the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum (especially the Udvar-Hazy Center) which has an SR-71 spy plane and Cold War fighters and things like Poseidon missiles (and some Soviet stuff as well).

 

When I was walking around Kyiv I wondered if anyone there had been assigned to the Black Sea Fleet back in '84, their HQ was obviously in Sevastopol in the then Ukrainian SSR. 

 

George

George K, thank you for your service too. The USS Peterson looks like it's an Arleigh-Burke class vessel. That Soviet era Mi-24 Hind helicopter always looks wicked. I have no idea how rugged or lethal it is in reality. What's going on in Ukraine is so upsetting. I miss the old Russia, right after the Berlin Wall came down. Now we seem to re-entering another Cold War.

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2 hours ago, ClipperFan said:

The USS Peterson looks like it's an Arleigh-Burke class vessel

Spruance, one (1.5?) generation back. Commissioned in '77, decommissioned in '02, sunk as part of a automated damage control system test for what became the Zumwalt class. Wreck discovered in 2014 (video here, but I'd mute the volume, the narration is maddening). There is but a single (heavily modified) 'Spru-can' left of the 31 built, ex-USS Paul F. Foster which is the self defense test ship in Port Hueneme and it's a shame. A group in the Midwest tried to preserve the USS Conolly but it fell through.

 

 

Current Builds: Bluejacket USS KearsargeRRS Discovery 1:72 scratch

Completed Builds: Model Shipways 1:96 Flying Fish | Model Shipways 1:64 US Brig Niagara | Model Shipways 1:64 Pride of Baltimore II (modified) | Midwest Muscongus Bay Lobster Smack | Heller 1:150 Passat | Revell 1:96 USS Constitution

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15 hours ago, gak1965 said:

Spruance, one (1.5?) generation back. Commissioned in '77, decommissioned in '02, sunk as part of a automated damage control system test for what became the Zumwalt class. Wreck discovered in 2014 (video here, but I'd mute the volume, the narration is maddening). There is but a single (heavily modified) 'Spru-can' left of the 31 built, ex-USS Paul F. Foster which is the self defense test ship in Port Hueneme and it's a shame. A group in the Midwest tried to preserve the USS Conolly but it fell through.

 

 

George, thanks for correcting the record. It's been so many years ago, I've forgotten about the noble Spruance class. Thanks for sharing the under sea video. 

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  • 2 weeks later...

Well - away from 20th century vessels and back to the 19th. I've completed all three topgallant masts, and assembled them into the fore, main, and mizzen. The doublers are all painted white, with everything else "bright". At some point, I will need to add the gilded balls and (I presume) lightning rods, but I think that can wait until the ship is almost done. A couple of photos. The fore and main in situ as it were:

 

IMG_20220807_123650688.thumb.jpg.b65db01b6f27e28f0838728e5177f068.jpg

 

 

and all three looking to port, and from the stem:

 

IMG_20220807_123645872_HDR.thumb.jpg.d3282469e9dd42171cad988666a2fb1f.jpgIMG_20220807_123732032.thumb.jpg.29bc78af3406bce8d888d103b4ed82c6.jpg

 

And, kind of an odd view looking diagonally forward.

 

IMG_20220807_123753548_HDR.thumb.jpg.78134116a3ba358133766075d1995956.jpg

 

A couple of observations. First, the fore topgallant mast seems to be raked a bit more than I want - I think the spar itself has a bit of a bend. When I put the forestays on I'll move the tip forward maybe 4-5 mm and it will align with everything else. What I am happy about is that there are no obvious problems with the alignment of the masts port and starboard (see the pic from the stem). Second, this was definitely a learning exercise. Even though the birch dowels I used to make the topgallants were denser and stronger than basswood, at this thickness and length there was no way to use my cutting tools without either (a) the spar just bending away from the tool or (b) snapping in two. Even after this discovery, it took 3 tries to do the first, 2 tries for the second, and fortunately only 1 try for the mizzen topgallant mast. Speed is not your friend - if I used sandpaper that was too rough (say less than 100 grit) to "rough out" the shape, I always wound up having the thinnest part snap (even when I wasn't sanding in that region).

 

Interestingly, what did seem to work well was to start at the narrow end (so that I made clear "ridges" where the diameter changed), using 150 grit and then sanding the other segments to make a spar that had the right proportions (i.e. it had 4 segments with specified length and proportionally smaller diameters) but was still too wide, and then go back with a mix of 150 and 220 grit to eventually obtain the proper diameters. For once, I didn't have to remake all of the mast caps. By gently hand sanding the openings wider I was eventually able to get the diameter of the holes sufficiently large to fit the spars. I did bust one of them, but it was less trouble than I expected to make a new one for some reason. In that case I hand drilled (i.e. I spun a 1/8 inch drill but with my fingers) to get the hold opened in a piece larger than the cap, and then sanded the rest of the opening. 

 

Anyway - next steps are to place the remainder of the mast mounted blocks (there are quite a few) and mount them on the ship. I've seen many people do wonderful work mounting the yards before they fully mount the mast - that hasn't been how I've done it in the past, and so for now the plan is to mount before rigging. One thing that has occurred to me is that I should probably make sure that I've drilled and fitted the path for the boat davits in the mizzen channels before I start putting in the shrouds. Drilling afterwards could be ugly.

 

As always, thanks for looking in!

 

Regards,

George K

Current Builds: Bluejacket USS KearsargeRRS Discovery 1:72 scratch

Completed Builds: Model Shipways 1:96 Flying Fish | Model Shipways 1:64 US Brig Niagara | Model Shipways 1:64 Pride of Baltimore II (modified) | Midwest Muscongus Bay Lobster Smack | Heller 1:150 Passat | Revell 1:96 USS Constitution

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https://www.vallejogallery.com/2022/item_mobile.php?page=item_page&id=1316

 

George, 

It's incredible how lofty the masts were on McKay's Clippers! Your doing a marvelous job capturing that. 

Meanwhile, I remembered a beautiful 1998 painting by David Thimgan. It depicts Flying Fish entering San Francisco Bay. 

2020_thimgan_flying_fish-1.jpg

Edited by ClipperFan
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  • 2 weeks later...

Hello all,

    A brief update and a question to the clipper cognoscenti. I've been mostly stropping and mounting blocks on the masts so they will be there when they are need during the rigging process. The one major change is that I've mounted all of the belaying pins, which were first chemically blackened per a suggestion a couple of months ago. There are a lot of pins! 

 

A couple of photos:

IMG_20220817_211039912.thumb.jpg.0b3436eb0254d574343b1711d544e5ff.jpg

 

IMG_20220817_211053273.thumb.jpg.327546df8210495e7e3360a5789b7865.jpg

 

IMG_20220817_211108806.thumb.jpg.cd53abbb631ab2fd710088af9c803c7a.jpg

 

On to the question. There are blocks on the mast tops and the trestle trees that are for the bunt and leech lines. I've included a pic from the plans that show the blocks on the topmast cross trees.

IMG_20220817_211144120.thumb.jpg.0994a22140802b55b161bb1e1635e0e8.jpg

The plans plus the instructions indicate that the blocks on the tops go on the forward cross tree. I can't definitively determine the situation on the topmast. Logic says put them on the forward cross tree, but if anyone has thoughts otherwise, I would love to be enlightened.

 

As always, thanks for looking in!

 

George K

Edited by gak1965

Current Builds: Bluejacket USS KearsargeRRS Discovery 1:72 scratch

Completed Builds: Model Shipways 1:96 Flying Fish | Model Shipways 1:64 US Brig Niagara | Model Shipways 1:64 Pride of Baltimore II (modified) | Midwest Muscongus Bay Lobster Smack | Heller 1:150 Passat | Revell 1:96 USS Constitution

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  • 2 weeks later...

Well, another milestone reached. I'm still mounting blocks on the masts (but I think I'm almost done with that), so to break up the routine I started rigging the bowsprit. So far, I've only installed the bobstays and the shrouds. The kit surprisingly did not include any hearts (although there was a laser cut sheet that included what I thought were mast hoops that turned out were bullseyes). In any case, I bought some extras from Bluejacket and used them.

 

The kit had a single diameter of chain for everything. When I put the anchors together, I thought that the supplied chain was massively out of scale (too small), so I bought a couple of feet of two larger sizes, the intermediate of which I used to represent the 1 inch chains on the shrouds and bobstays. For the bobstays, I stropped the hearts with 34 gauge black wire and then bent the tail into a hook which I either inserted into a jackstay eyebolt (for the non -chain end) or the chain itself. The lanyards are black seeing as this is standing rigging.

 

Here is a view of the stem and bowsprit.

 

Photo1.thumb.jpg.c6c33af513a16a504c5b2b2eb707cf31.jpg

 

Here is a view showing the shrouds.

 

Photo2.thumb.jpg.56bf1b06663c81fe7c2ec7979aeab112.jpg

 

The forward attachment of the shrouds is pretty much the same as the bobstays, but the hull end is quite different. The bobstays are basically attached to an eyebolt embedded in a metal strap. By contrast the shrouds are attached as in the photo below (sorry about the image quality).

 

731751694_Photo4.png.02a8b6e394adfae1b4c365d7fdbf9765.png 

 

The mounting strap is 1/64" wide brass, with a split ring attached on one end, and the chain attached to the split ring (anchor chain obviously coming from the hawse pipe). 

 

From the last post, no one had any suggestions, so I wound up mounting the blocks on the forward cross tree - it makes sense from logic and the similar blocks on the mast tops, so, that's how I decided to proceed. 

 

Next step on the bowsprit is to rig the dolphin striker and the associated martingales and bobstays. The kit comes with a Britannia striker, but I think I'm going to scratch build one. It's the correct length but the locations for the stays are all wrong, and it's just a bit clunky. One decision that I will need to make eventually is how to terminate the various stays on the foremast on the hull. The Boston Daily Atlas indicates that the stays were belayed inside the ship on various frames, which is to say under the forecastle which is pretty much inaccessible at this point. Doing this in the way of the real ship would seem to require drilling through both the hull planks and the ceiling planks, feeding the line through both and terminating them somehow inside the ship. Two options come to mind, one of which is to drill holes in the outer hull, feed the line in and glue or to mount to small eyebolts. Neither is perfect, I suspect that I will do the latter as the lesser of two evils. If I had thought further ahead, I might have run the lines before I decked over the forecastle, but we can all be wise in hindsight.

 

As always, thanks for looking in!

 

Regards,

George K.

 

PS - Background movie in the first pic is, of course, The Hunt for Red October. One of several proper choices, I think you will all agree, for ship modeling. 

Current Builds: Bluejacket USS KearsargeRRS Discovery 1:72 scratch

Completed Builds: Model Shipways 1:96 Flying Fish | Model Shipways 1:64 US Brig Niagara | Model Shipways 1:64 Pride of Baltimore II (modified) | Midwest Muscongus Bay Lobster Smack | Heller 1:150 Passat | Revell 1:96 USS Constitution

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George , to anchor stays (and some sheets) I just used the drill-and-glue method on my little plastic Academy 1/350 Cutty Sark. I would never presume to suggest my amateur techniques should be used on your incredible first-rate build, but it was easy...... 😃  

 

Brian

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George, the Bobstays and shrouds look great.  I too am struggling how to terminate the foremast shrouds.  Drill a hole in the hull and gluing the stays in the hole doesn’t seem to me to be strong enough to withstand the pull of the shrouds.   I am considering passing the shrouds through a hole in the hull secured with a knot in the shroud from under the forecastle deck.  Tricky and still leaves the fore stay which is doubled.  Decisions decisions…

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Brian,

      Appreciate the insight. I think it's a perfectly fine way to manage lines that go into inaccessible locations. The sheets probably didn't have a huge amount of stress on them, but I don't have a good feel for the amount of strain on the forestays of the Academy model. Are the deadeyes/lanyards one plastic piece or are they held together with thread? If the latter it would tend to suggest that the glued line/bulwark joint can take a fair amount of strain, which is the question here.

 

Rick,

    That's my concern too. I'm worried about the amount of stress on the stays. The doubled lower forestay anchors in the knightheads, but the doubled topmast forestay that goes through the bees to the bulwarks has the combination of a decent lever arm, a stiff spar, and plenty of pull from the backstays that makes me think it's going to need to be pretty strongly seated.

 

I suspect I'm going to take the approach of mounting a homemade eyebolt (that will have the twisted wire stem for better grip) with some CA glue and belay the lines on the bolt. Maybe bend the stem so that it can adhere to the bulwark from behind, or if I'm lucky have it screwed into one of the bulkheads. Not technically correct, but I'll keep the loop just big enough for the line and a black eyebolt against a black bulwark with black line will hide the sins.

 

 

Current Builds: Bluejacket USS KearsargeRRS Discovery 1:72 scratch

Completed Builds: Model Shipways 1:96 Flying Fish | Model Shipways 1:64 US Brig Niagara | Model Shipways 1:64 Pride of Baltimore II (modified) | Midwest Muscongus Bay Lobster Smack | Heller 1:150 Passat | Revell 1:96 USS Constitution

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On 8/30/2022 at 2:24 AM, gak1965 said:

Well, another milestone reached. I'm still mounting blocks on the masts (but I think I'm almost done with that), so to break up the routine I started rigging the bowsprit. So far, I've only installed the bobstays and the shrouds. The kit surprisingly did not include any hearts (although there was a laser cut sheet that included what I thought were mast hoops that turned out were bullseyes). In any case, I bought some extras from Bluejacket and used them.

 

The kit had a single diameter of chain for everything. When I put the anchors together, I thought that the supplied chain was massively out of scale (too small), so I bought a couple of feet of two larger sizes, the intermediate of which I used to represent the 1 inch chains on the shrouds and bobstays. For the bobstays, I stropped the hearts with 34 gauge black wire and then bent the tail into a hook which I either inserted into a jackstay eyebolt (for the non -chain end) or the chain itself. The lanyards are black seeing as this is standing rigging.

 

Here is a view of the stem and bowsprit.

 

Photo1.thumb.jpg.c6c33af513a16a504c5b2b2eb707cf31.jpg

 

Here is a view showing the shrouds.

 

Photo2.thumb.jpg.56bf1b06663c81fe7c2ec7979aeab112.jpg

 

The forward attachment of the shrouds is pretty much the same as the bobstays, but the hull end is quite different. The bobstays are basically attached to an eyebolt embedded in a metal strap. By contrast the shrouds are attached as in the photo below (sorry about the image quality).

 

731751694_Photo4.png.02a8b6e394adfae1b4c365d7fdbf9765.png 

 

The mounting strap is 1/64" wide brass, with a split ring attached on one end, and the chain attached to the split ring (anchor chain obviously coming from the hawse pipe). 

 

From the last post, no one had any suggestions, so I wound up mounting the blocks on the forward cross tree - it makes sense from logic and the similar blocks on the mast tops, so, that's how I decided to proceed. 

 

Next step on the bowsprit is to rig the dolphin striker and the associated martingales and bobstays. The kit comes with a Britannia striker, but I think I'm going to scratch build one. It's the correct length but the locations for the stays are all wrong, and it's just a bit clunky. One decision that I will need to make eventually is how to terminate the various stays on the foremast on the hull. The Boston Daily Atlas indicates that the stays were belayed inside the ship on various frames, which is to say under the forecastle which is pretty much inaccessible at this point. Doing this in the way of the real ship would seem to require drilling through both the hull planks and the ceiling planks, feeding the line through both and terminating them somehow inside the ship. Two options come to mind, one of which is to drill holes in the outer hull, feed the line in and glue or to mount to small eyebolts. Neither is perfect, I suspect that I will do the latter as the lesser of two evils. If I had thought further ahead, I might have run the lines before I decked over the forecastle, but we can all be wise in hindsight.

 

As always, thanks for looking in!

 

Regards,

George K.

 

PS - Background movie in the first pic is, of course, The Hunt for Red October. One of several proper choices, I think you will all agree, for ship modeling. 

George K

I'm wondering why mounting the lines "inside the ship" wouldn't just as easily refer to her forecastle, which would have been much more accesible, instead of her main deck? It strikes me that, in order not to have the lines chafing against the ceiling of the forecastle, access holes would of necessity had to been made through the forecastle. Knowing how seas would crash over her bow, that would lead to more access points for water to enter into the sailor's berths which were beneath the forecastle. None of that makes sense to me. What does make sense is reinforced verticle posts terminating on the forecastle, as designated mounting points for the ship's lines. Being part of the vessel's superstructure would give it the added benefit of the ability to withstand the stresses of those lines as well. Just my 2c, others can either confirm or refute my observations.

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8 hours ago, ClipperFan said:

George K

I'm wondering why mounting the lines "inside the ship" wouldn't just as easily refer to her forecastle, which would have been much more accesible, instead of her main deck? It strikes me that, in order not to have the lines chafing against the ceiling of the forecastle, access holes would of necessity had to been made through the forecastle. Knowing how seas would crash over her bow, that would lead to more access points for water to enter into the sailor's berths which were beneath the forecastle. None of that makes sense to me. What does make sense is reinforced verticle posts terminating on the forecastle, as designated mounting points for the ship's lines. Being part of the vessel's superstructure would give it the added benefit of the ability to withstand the stresses of those lines as well. Just my 2c, others can either confirm or refute my observations.

Sorry - I think we are actually saying the same thing, I just did so poorly. Both the supplied plans and the description point to the mounting points being topside of the main deck and below the forecastle deck in the open forecastle interior to the bulwarks. Here is a small section of the plans to show you what I mean:

IMG_20220904_191403739.thumb.jpg.6dcbf069b8df34cf677a01f2c014b1f4.jpg

 

My problem is that there is deck covering the space where the lines would belay, and it would involve drilling through both the bulwarks and the ceiling planks to get there. Probably not impossible with sufficient patience and some specialized tools, but I'd need a (very small) offset drill with a very short bit (something like a dentists drill) to put in the necessary holes for the belaying bolts. So, anyone that wants to do this maximally accurately will need to put in the belaying points (and I'd recommend drilling the hole in the bulwarks) before they plank over the forecastle. And because of the amount of strain on the lines, I'm not really hip about trusting to glue to hold the lines in place (which is what the instructions suggest). So, likely a bolt in the bulwarks.

 

Regards,

George K

Current Builds: Bluejacket USS KearsargeRRS Discovery 1:72 scratch

Completed Builds: Model Shipways 1:96 Flying Fish | Model Shipways 1:64 US Brig Niagara | Model Shipways 1:64 Pride of Baltimore II (modified) | Midwest Muscongus Bay Lobster Smack | Heller 1:150 Passat | Revell 1:96 USS Constitution

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GeorgeK,

I see your problem. Instead of ripping up your forecastle deck to get access to those bulwark mounting holes, wouldn't it be simpler to use a short metal piece that just fits in the hole drilled. Then pull the line tight so that the piece is now crosswise to the hole. Maintain tension on it. Maybe put the smallest drop of superglue to reinforce it. As I see it, no body can see the interior that far it so simulating the arrangement should work just fine.

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Well, bowsprit rigged until it is time to mount the forestays (soon!). A couple of pics:

 

IMG_20220908_092218706.thumb.jpg.1a96ed9eb47eff62b3852e2d1e1eaee1.jpg

 

IMG_20220908_092303453.thumb.jpg.36ba9004745288ccea95e93525709cc3.jpg

 

The foremast needs 4 more blocks before it's time to start mounting shrouds. One question I hoped that someone like @rwiederrich might be able to answer is how they handled the halliard blocks on the trestle trees (given that those are 2 of the four). The plans suggest that they weren't standard wooden blocks, but something that frankly looks more like a sheave (or maybe a roller on a desk chair), an iron circle inside of a triangular support. So far, my attempts to fabricate them have failed utterly or just been badly out of scale. I could paint standard blocks black so that they are more like iron, or if anyone has suggestions, I'd love to hear them.

 

Thanks for looking in!

 

George K 

Current Builds: Bluejacket USS KearsargeRRS Discovery 1:72 scratch

Completed Builds: Model Shipways 1:96 Flying Fish | Model Shipways 1:64 US Brig Niagara | Model Shipways 1:64 Pride of Baltimore II (modified) | Midwest Muscongus Bay Lobster Smack | Heller 1:150 Passat | Revell 1:96 USS Constitution

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George, 

what a wonderful job! I keep following you in silence, and it is a real pleasure to see this marvel growing. 

Unfortunately, I am not able to help you for the halliard. I'm more familiar with the Cutty Sark, but she has standard single block for each halliard under the fore trestle tree.

I'm sure someone else will help you! 

Thank you for sharing your build! 

 

Current build: Cutty Sark - Revell - 1:96:   https://modelshipworld.com/topic/25323-cutty-sark-by-bruma-revell-196/

 

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1 hour ago, gak1965 said:

Well, bowsprit rigged until it is time to mount the forestays (soon!). A couple of pics:

 

IMG_20220908_092218706.thumb.jpg.1a96ed9eb47eff62b3852e2d1e1eaee1.jpg

 

IMG_20220908_092303453.thumb.jpg.36ba9004745288ccea95e93525709cc3.jpg

 

The foremast needs 4 more blocks before it's time to start mounting shrouds. One question I hoped that someone like @rwiederrich might be able to answer is how they handled the halliard blocks on the trestle trees (given that those are 2 of the four). The plans suggest that they weren't standard wooden blocks, but something that frankly looks more like a sheave (or maybe a roller on a desk chair), an iron circle inside of a triangular support. So far, my attempts to fabricate them have failed utterly or just been badly out of scale. I could paint standard blocks black so that they are more like iron, or if anyone has suggestions, I'd love to hear them.

 

Thanks for looking in!

 

George K 

George K

From post #2822 to #2840 Rob describes in great detail his fabrication process for maling "gin blocks". From their function, they sound very similar to the halliard blocks you're looking to make.

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3 hours ago, gak1965 said:

Well, bowsprit rigged until it is time to mount the forestays (soon!). A couple of pics:

 

IMG_20220908_092218706.thumb.jpg.1a96ed9eb47eff62b3852e2d1e1eaee1.jpg

 

IMG_20220908_092303453.thumb.jpg.36ba9004745288ccea95e93525709cc3.jpg

 

The foremast needs 4 more blocks before it's time to start mounting shrouds. One question I hoped that someone like @rwiederrich might be able to answer is how they handled the halliard blocks on the trestle trees (given that those are 2 of the four). The plans suggest that they weren't standard wooden blocks, but something that frankly looks more like a sheave (or maybe a roller on a desk chair), an iron circle inside of a triangular support. So far, my attempts to fabricate them have failed utterly or just been badly out of scale. I could paint standard blocks black so that they are more like iron, or if anyone has suggestions, I'd love to hear them.

 

Thanks for looking in!

 

George K 

George, are they blocks for hauling the yards?  Typically the sheave is imbedded within the mast itself.....but the haulyard for the main yard on my Great Republic was external and I used model railroad sheaved logging blocks for that application.  some are metal and some are printed.  They did need some slight modifications, but they worked for my needs.

Show me a pic of what you are talking about and what/where the blocks are supposed to be located on the tree.  I will then be able to tell you what I did and what you may possibly do.

 

Rob

Current build:

Build log: https://modelshipworld.com/topic/25382-glory-of-the-seas-medium-clipper-1869-by-rwiederrich-196

 

 

Finished build:

Build log: of 1/128th Great Republic: http://modelshipworld.com/index.php/topic/13740-great-republic-by-rwiederrich-four-masted-extreme-clipper-1853/#

 

Current build(On hold):

Build log: 1/96  Donald McKay:http://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/topic/4522-donald-mckay-medium-clipper-by-rwiederrich-1855/

 

Completed build:  http://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/gallery/album/475-196-cutty-sark-plastic/

The LORD said, "See, I have set (them) aside...with skills of all kinds, to make artistic designs for work in gold, silver, and bronze, to cut and set stones, to work in wood, and to engage in all kinds of crafts."

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7 hours ago, ClipperFan said:

From post #2822 to #2840 Rob describes in great detail his fabrication process for maling "gin blocks". From their function, they sound very similar to the halliard blocks you're looking to make.

 

They might be - and that is in fact an ingenious fabrication method.

 

6 hours ago, rwiederrich said:

George, are they blocks for hauling the yards?  Typically the sheave is imbedded within the mast itself.....but the haulyard for the main yard on my Great Republic was external and I used model railroad sheaved logging blocks for that application.  some are metal and some are printed.  They did need some slight modifications, but they worked for my needs.

Show me a pic of what you are talking about and what/where the blocks are supposed to be located on the tree.  I will then be able to tell you what I did and what you may possibly do.

 

So it is a set of blocks for hauling the topsails. The rest of the halliards are just as you describe, sheaves directly in the mast and I'm just using holes for those rather than try to install the actual sheave. This is a more complicated rig just for the topsail. I'm including a snap of a small section of the plans that show what I'm talking about:

 

IMG_20220908_194448245.thumb.jpg.839d3380a340e600ecda30fd90c87625.jpg

 

They do look like gin blocks but mounted as a pair on the trestle trees instead of on the yard.

 

Regards,

George K

 

Current Builds: Bluejacket USS KearsargeRRS Discovery 1:72 scratch

Completed Builds: Model Shipways 1:96 Flying Fish | Model Shipways 1:64 US Brig Niagara | Model Shipways 1:64 Pride of Baltimore II (modified) | Midwest Muscongus Bay Lobster Smack | Heller 1:150 Passat | Revell 1:96 USS Constitution

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8 hours ago, Bruma said:

George, 

what a wonderful job! I keep following you in silence, and it is a real pleasure to see this marvel growing. 

Unfortunately, I am not able to help you for the halliard. I'm more familiar with the Cutty Sark, but she has standard single block for each halliard under the fore trestle tree.

I'm sure someone else will help you! 

Thank you for sharing your build! 

 

Thanks! I  am always on the lookout for your next post!

Current Builds: Bluejacket USS KearsargeRRS Discovery 1:72 scratch

Completed Builds: Model Shipways 1:96 Flying Fish | Model Shipways 1:64 US Brig Niagara | Model Shipways 1:64 Pride of Baltimore II (modified) | Midwest Muscongus Bay Lobster Smack | Heller 1:150 Passat | Revell 1:96 USS Constitution

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