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Posted (edited)

I have achieved Deckhouse!

Before fastening the roof I placed the builder's plaque... made from a picture of the original.

20250410_131714.thumb.jpg.985cd9873161e035257d8c9ef861d1bb.jpg

Builderplaque2.thumb.jpg.6e71eb3954cce4723df988f262484190.jpg

My historic photos are in black and white, and show a greyish roof. St. Roch had a limited colour palette so I mixed a bit of green into the grey, as if this surface was canvas covered and sealed like the hatch covers and companion roof.

20250412_113241.thumb.jpg.11d8c176a73b1e39eda387c37aa685d1.jpg

20250412_113154.thumb.jpg.e21d81be0e3be5da3e47cf0a40e84cc2.jpg

Moving right along... I started framing the structure behind the deckhouse. This is original to the ship and was not replaced when the deckhouse was enlarged in 1930. To the left is the lobby leading to the lower deck. To the right is the head. It is 2 feet lower because there is no clerestory underneath.

20250412_133510.thumb.jpg.d071157eb535fc8ef6a9034b769b33f7.jpg

Once this is finished there are some ventilators and gew-gaws (a nautical term for fiddly bits, eh) to put on, then I will move on to the wireless office and steering gear.

I hope you like my ship so far!

Bruce

Edited by Lecrenb
Posted

The rear structure framing is complete... behind the lobby and head is the wireless office relocated from the lower deck.

image.thumb.jpeg.7b0d3522bcb81373294e79e458e85caa.jpeg

The ventilators and galley stack are installed... leaving room for the main boom that passes across the top of the deckhouse.

The aft structure is painted and the roof set on to check fit. The lobby and head are original and retained the 1928 stained and varnished finish, The rest of the new deckhouse is white.

Aftstructureportroughin.thumb.jpg.3302791d614c62888a0e36c9ac748303.jpg

Here is the ship sitting on the display base, just seeing how it looks for now. I'm making the doors and windows for the aft structure, then time for some paint touch up and a few more small parts then the hull is basically complete!

Aftstructurestbdroughin.thumb.jpg.e7a3b7af624ce8df458b3a9a79ed819b.jpg

Next up will be the rudder and steering gear, followed by the boat platforms and davits.

Thanks for looking in!

Bruce

 

Posted

The deck house structures are complete... here is the lobby, head, and wireless office before attaching to the ship. The unit on top of the head is marked as "sanitary service tank" on the plans, and photos confirm it is there... not sure what was in the tank. If it was water for flushing how would the crew keep it from freezing? Another conundrum to add to the list!

I used glass beads from the craft store to make the aerial insulators. The aerials are only attached when the main sail is down, and when the ship is getting ready for a scheduled contact, there was no power for the radio unless the auxiliary engine was running. In the 1930s she carried a low frequency morse code (wireless telegraphy) transmitter and receiver. 

The original insulators had to have passed through the main deck, which made them prone to damage, and would be a shock hazard. This may be the reason the office was moved to the upper deck.

20250417_092918.thumb.jpg.d9b82ed98c41e88e43e3ec4da9396aa6.jpg

There are differences in the doors, explained by the fact the wheelhouse and wireless office are new structures. Plans and photos show portholes only in the lobby and head doors.

Here's what it looks like when it is all put together.

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I have started work on the steering linkage to the rudder, but I may re-make my pulleys as they look a bit out of scale, we'll see how they clean up...

Thanks again one and all for looking in and for your comments.

This will be my last posting for a while as we are visiting family, then I am getting a new knee next week! The surgeon is one of the few in Alberta to use the Cori-robotic system and I am really looking forward to the procedure!

Happy Easter!

Bruce

 

Posted
10 minutes ago, Lecrenb said:

If it was water for flushing how would the crew keep it from freezing? Another conundrum to add to the list!

 Bruce, it could be that the toilet was used often enough that the water never had a chance to freeze? Hey, praying your surgery goes well and that you recover quickly.  

Current Builds:  1870's Sternwheeler, Lula

                             Wood Hull Screw Frigate USS Tennessee

                             Decorative Carrack Warship Restoration, the Amelia

 

Completed: 1880s Floating Steam Donkey Pile Driver                       

                       Early Swift 1805 Model Restoration

 

 

Posted

Looks great Bruce!  Good luck with the knee and wish you a speedy recovery.

Steve

 

San Diego Ship Modelers Guild

Nautical Research Guild


Launched:    USS Theodore Roosevelt, CVN 71 (1/720, Plastic)

                       USS Missouri, BB 63 (1/535 Plastic) 

                       USS Yorktown, CV 5 (1/700, Plastic)

 

In Dry Dock:  Prince de Neufchatel, New York 1812 (1/58, Wood)

                        USS Enterprise, CVAN 65 (1/720, Plastic)

Posted (edited)

THE CABINS LOOK GREAT!

 

I just watch a two short videos of the cori robotic knee replacement surgery... got my GDD (Google Doctor's degree!).

I'm guessing it will be a quicker recovery with this procedure.

 

Hoping all goes well and your back jogging in no time.

Edited by AON

Alan O'Neill
"only dead fish go with the flow"   :dancetl6:

Ongoing Build (31 Dec 2013) - HMS BELLEROPHON (1786), POF scratch build, scale 1:64, 74 gun 3rd rate Man of War, Arrogant Class

Member of the Model Shipwrights of Niagara, Niagara Region, Ontario, Canada (2016), and the Nautical Research Guild (since 2014)

Associate member of the Nautical Research and Model Ship Society (2021)

Offshore member of The Society of Model Shipwrights (2021)

Out of State member of the New Bern Maritime Modelers Guild (2025)

Posted
2 hours ago, Keith Black said:

 Bruce, it could be that the toilet was used often enough that the water never had a chance to freeze? Hey, praying your surgery goes well and that you recover quickly.  

Thanks Keith... they tell me I'll be taking first steps as soon as the anesthetic wears off!

The water would freeze pretty fast in an Arctic winter, -40 highs are common. I'm thinking they likely drained it and manually flushed from a pail??

Posted
2 hours ago, Coyote_6 said:

Looks great Bruce!  Good luck with the knee and wish you a speedy recovery.

Thanks very much Steve, much appreciated!

 

Posted
9 hours ago, AON said:

THE CABINS LOOK GREAT!

 

I just watch a two short videos of the cori robotic knee replacement surgery... got my GDD (Google Doctor's degree!).

I'm guessing it will be a quicker recovery with this procedure.

 

Hoping all goes well and your back jogging in no time.

Thanks Alan! Yes, it is supposed to be a smaller incision and more precise placement of the prosthetic... they do expect me to be up and moving as soon as I'm fully awake!

Posted

Regarding the jogging.  If anybody sees me out jogging, PLEASE kill whatever is chasing me!

Kurt Van Dahm

Director

NAUTICAL RESEARCH GUILD

www.thenrg.org

SAY NO TO PIRACY. SUPPORT ORIGINAL IDEAS AND MANUFACTURERS

CLUBS

Nautical Research & Model Ship Society of Chicago

Midwest Model Shipwrights

North Shore Deadeyes

The Society of Model Shipwrights

Butch O'Hare - IPMS

Posted
41 minutes ago, kurtvd19 said:

Regarding the jogging.  If anybody sees me out jogging, PLEASE kill whatever is chasing me!

 As long as it's not Mary I'd be happy to oblige.  :)

Current Builds:  1870's Sternwheeler, Lula

                             Wood Hull Screw Frigate USS Tennessee

                             Decorative Carrack Warship Restoration, the Amelia

 

Completed: 1880s Floating Steam Donkey Pile Driver                       

                       Early Swift 1805 Model Restoration

 

 

  • 4 weeks later...
Posted (edited)

Greetings everyone, and for those who sent good thoughts for my new knee, thank you very much!

The Cori-Robotic surgery was very successful, the full replacement took only 90 minutes and I had a spinal anesthetic, not a general. 4 hours later the feeling came back and they got me up on my pins and taking my first steps! I was in overnight to make sure everything was ok, then I walked out using only the cane! After a week I ditched the cane and was back walking the dog, about 1000 steps per day.

The improvement is ongoing, and my second knee is scheduled for June 4!

I have been able to negotiate the basement stairs for about a week now so I have been back at the St. Roch, working mainly on the steering linkages.

 

The first two pictures are the alleyways either side of the deckhouse... I added the steps up to the doors and the covers for the steering chains. There are shackles under the covers connecting the chain from the steering wheel gypsy to the steel cables running aft. I used .015 diameter black thread to simulate 3/4" wire rope. I scratch built the four cable pulleys from styrene.

Portalleyway.thumb.jpg.dd8a0bcf7413f4311145081b6207a7d7.jpgStbdalleyway.thumb.jpg.9d7bd4d50313cdd0bdde35d9e34ef45c.jpg

Next I followed the original ship's plans to make the rudder bearing, which is bolted to the hull just forward of the rudder well. The bearing halves clamp the rudder post. The two steering cables are just set out of the way using the aft cleats.

Rudderbearing.thumb.jpg.9ee72f1cb8b8d1d3a3e5f4b16bb04523.jpg

I have started making the rudder quadrant, as seen in the last picture. Again, I followed the ship's plans to make an accurate shape. The quadrant is designed for chains. On the prototype there are 'Z' channels following the arc of the quadrant, the chains sit in the channels and are shackled to the holes visible on the quadrant. I tried bending styrene channel but this was unsuccessful, so I'm making the channels from individual strips.

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There are chain pulleys guiding them out to the sides of the ship, where turnbuckles will connect them to the cables. I should be able to have the linkages complete shortly. I think at that point I will permanently mount the ship onto its' display base.

Thanks for looking in!

 

Edited by Lecrenb
Posted

Congratulations on your successful knee surgery, Bruce.

Current Builds:  1870's Sternwheeler, Lula

                             Wood Hull Screw Frigate USS Tennessee

                             Decorative Carrack Warship Restoration, the Amelia

 

Completed: 1880s Floating Steam Donkey Pile Driver                       

                       Early Swift 1805 Model Restoration

 

 

Posted
1 hour ago, druxey said:

Congrats on your early ambulation as well as the success of the surgery, Bruce. Also on your progress with the model.

Thanks Druxey, on both counts! Good to be back at it...

Posted

Got some more work done on the quadrant this evening... the first two picturres are parts of the original ship's plans from 1928. They show the rudder bearing and quadrant, the two parts I am working on now.

One picture also shows the rudder stops and brake, which I will make once the linkages are done.

Bearingandquadrantplan.thumb.jpg.9a6ae4214306109d5b1206ef2e7acf0f.jpg

Quadrantplanwithbrake.thumb.jpg.9724898c2eda51bc376b9b6023a11868.jpg

Here is the quadrant test fitted to the rudder head. The upper chain channel is starting to take shape!

Quadranttestfit.thumb.jpg.8d32a23654de67eb34b897d892e008e4.jpg

Thanks for looking in!

Bruce

 

Posted

Got the rudder installed this evening...

Here they are ready to be fitted to the ship, with the bearing half and the quadrant. St. Roch carried a spare rudder on deck, the service rudder could be lifted onto the deck through the rudder well using tackle rigged to the main boom. This was usually done to prevent damage from the pack ice or when the ship was frozen in for the winter. The rudder is made from Ironbark (Australian gum) which does not float, hence the safety chain.

Ruddersreadytoinstall.thumb.jpg.ff27d7fe22eed25b7cbdd4b294606fd4.jpg

These next pictures show the rudder in place, and the bearing clamped while the glue sets. The piece of solder is preventing the chain from falling through the well while its' retaining strap is glued in place on the deck.

Rudderinstalled.thumb.jpg.4ca08f65be6d87bf3c0f9051457b05ba.jpg

Clampingrudderbearing.thumb.jpg.8dbb80bb43715590f57d43a105c076f4.jpg

Here is the deck view with everything set in place, and a view down through the rudder well...

Rudderbearinginstalled.thumb.jpg.939c6cec3419597344cb48bea353d63a.jpg

Rudderwell.thumb.jpg.ff12b331357e930703aad5da3cfb7944.jpg

Tomorrow I will shackle the steering chains to the quadrant and get that fixed in place along with the chain pulleys. Then I will complete the linkages.

After some final paint touch ups on the hull she'll be ready for her display base.

 

Posted

I completed the steering linkages today... I mounted the quadrant to the rudder post and fed the chains from the quadrant around the chain pulleys.

Turnbuckles connect the chains to the steering cables, I used cast brass bodies from San Juan Details and made the ends from #22 copper wire.

Shackles connect everything together. I made mine from fine solder with Grandt Line nut and bolt details.

This layout follows sketches made by Captain Larsen in 1930 that routed the linkages along the waterways and eliminated the original block and tackle tensioning arrangement.

Rudderlinkages.thumb.jpg.63c03c165da0aa93d881bbe42df2e2e9.jpg

Coming soon are the rudder stops and quadrant brake to finish this off. 

Enjoy!

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