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Ottoman Ship of the Line Mahmudiye by GeorgeKapas - FINISHED - 1/350


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So this was a project I started after my friend and naval historian Emir Yener send me the plans of the ship, that he found archived in Russia and had them redrawned. He will publish them along with an article about the ship, so unfortunatelly I cant really post them properly here. Needless to say, I had to try and built it. In fact I have grown to love scrathbuilding ships, especially smaller scaled ones, and this built proved a great lesson for me, as I had only built few ships from scratch, and no ship of the line, or even proper fully rigged ship. My initial thought was to just make a waterline hull to test methods and technics, but the scope grew and grew. Later I added the underwater hull, then I decided to fully rig the ship, and by the end, add a waterline sea-diorama base for her. The project took 8 months of several back and forths, mistakes and a lot of downtime when I was preocupied with other activities and models.. Half way through, and before starting the rigging of the ship, I decided to donate it, once finished, to the Naval Museum in Istanbul. Indeed, last week I visited Emir in Istanbul, took Mahmudiye to the museum, which accepted the small model to my great pleasure and honor. I want to thank Emir Yener for the plans of the ship, as well as for his hospitality! This is going to be one my usual threads, that I will post in the next few hours all of the built, from start till its completion. 

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Lets start with some info and photos of the ship. 128 guns, dimensions 76.15 m × 21.22, one of the largests ships of the line ever built. Later, it came to my attention that some schoolars debate the length of the Turkish foot (kadem), but for me that was rather irrelevant, as it would only slightly change the stated scale. The plans had no scale and I printed them manually anyway. Launched in 1829, she participated in the Siege of Sevastopol (1854–55) and was considered to be upgraded to steam propulsion but that plan was never materialized. 

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So originally I printed the lines for a waterline hull. Used thick paper and architectural foamcore to fill in the gaps. Her lines are unconventional, quite wide, limited tumblehome, bow heavy volume and rather thin lines aft, with only two levels of galleries and a flush continuous deck like a frigate.

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Edited by GeorgeKapas
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I heavily use superglue, even as far as completely coating the paper to turn it into some short of fiberglass. I also used thin stripes of plastic sourced from the sails of plastic kits. I added the wales using this plastic and traced and cut the gunports. Boxes will be inserted and then all surfaces will be coated with filler to be sanded down. 

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Wonderful work, George! I'm looking forward to seeing more.

 

By the way, where in Istanbul is the Naval Museum? I've been to the military Museum and the Archaeological Museum, but I didn't know there was a naval one as well.

 

Steven

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37 minutes ago, Louie da fly said:

Wonderful work, George! I'm looking forward to seeing more.

 

By the way, where in Istanbul is the Naval Museum? I've been to the military Museum and the Archaeological Museum, but I didn't know there was a naval one as well.

 

Steven

Thank you! The museum is right next to the Dolmabahce Palace. It has royal barges and a galley, but not much in the way of models unfortunately. 

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So here is the stern being worked on. All surfaces were still quite rough at this point The plans called for a balcony as well. The masts are simply inserted and not properly fitted. As for the deck, I did it by hand as a seperate piece, which is still not fitted properly down. I also made a nice base for a full hull display, a plan I later revised. Notice the boxes inserted to create the gunports, quite a lot of them and about 2,5mm cubed 

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Edited by GeorgeKapas
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The hundreds of guns were made with scrap plastic melted spurce and beads. I used a base for the gun stubs so I dont have to paint the interior of the box behind the gupports, everything in this model is tiny. The gunports are of the American two piece style. Needless to say these were many many small pieces 

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Thanks for posting this wonderful journey, George. Miniature modelling is fascinating to me and I am very interested in your use of materials. Just one question: What is 'melted spruce'?

 

It would be good if you have the time to describe in more detail some of the techniques you have used in assembly, e.g. about the cannon assembly and the gratings.

 

Thanks,

 

Tony

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6 hours ago, tkay11 said:

Thanks for posting this wonderful journey, George. Miniature modelling is fascinating to me and I am very interested in your use of materials. Just one question: What is 'melted spruce'?

 

It would be good if you have the time to describe in more detail some of the techniques you have used in assembly, e.g. about the cannon assembly and the gratings.

 

Thanks,

 

Tony

Thanks!! Indeed I forgot once again to properly document the process because of the time pressure this year... Actually sorry I misspelled sprue. So I meant the classic method of melting pieces of sprue of kits to produce lines of varous thickness etc.  I also have a large supply of vacuum formed sails from kits, that I use as thin sheets of plastic for virtually anything. For the deck and some fittings, I printed black and white designs on the lazer printer, glued them on cardboard, coated their edges with ACC or superglue, and painted them. The guns as you can see are a combination of such materials, the muzzles are actually tiny beads etc 

Edited by GeorgeKapas
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So I made a few long guns and short guns for the top deck. Again, the carriage was scratch, the wheels and gun muzzles were beads, I actually sources some old guns and cut them down to scale. Some close ups of the quarter deck, with my painted deck clearly visible now. Notice I also printed and painted some windows for the galleries. Once again, the model is tiny and later on I took some photos with me near it for scale. 

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Edited by GeorgeKapas
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For the rigging, I ordered the smallest blocks I could find, 2,5mm and then cut them horizontally in half to reduce them further more and actually get 2 of them out of one. As for the deadeyes for the shrouds, this was a world of problems for me. In the end, after many tests, I found a design that was good enough and simple enough, so I could make hundreads of them quickly, and actually still looked recognizable to an observer a reasonable distance away. Once again made by melted sprue 

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Edited by GeorgeKapas
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I also discovered that the footropes of the yards were a constant obstruction, but there was no way they could have been added after the fact. Being made out of melted plastic, they were constantly breaking. If the scale permits next time, I will make them out of 0.25mm thread instead..

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