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Roman Quinquereme and Claw by Glen McGuire - FINISHED - 1/500 - BOTTLE


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I concur about having a 'wave' at the front to support the bottle. Otherwise you'd be placing an unreasonable amount of strain on the epoxy at the back and it would almost certainly sag, which would be a terrible shame for such a clever model.

 

10 hours ago, Knocklouder said:

Would the ship be moving  pretty fast , ramming speed?.

That's an interesting question. I should think it would be - running up as far as possible into the shallows to allow the walls to be attacked. I know there were structures designed to allow attackers to get up higher than the walls, (this is a Byzantine picture from about the 11th century AD, but I'm pretty sure they were in use far earlier.)*

 

 image.png.9b7fefb22f03db02655736837951d74b.png

But as you haven't included such a structure, perhaps the ship wouldn't be doing that.

 

OTOH, how would a Roman ship attack the walls effectively? It'd surely have to get close enough for the crew to erect scaling ladders (see Ferrus Mannus's post #68 in his Holy Ghost build), and depending on the depth of the water, might have to run in at full speed to reach them. And of course the claw is a short-range weapon., so it would only work if the ship was close up against the walls.

 

Steven

 

* Don't ask me what that giant head is for. I have no idea.

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 Glen, a piece of small diameter clear acrylic rod might work? There are a number of suppliers, I selected the link below at random. 

 

https://www.tapplastics.com/product/plastics/plastic_rods_tubes_shapes/acrylic_rods/147?srsltid=AfmBOoq7GgJLZiDwEyKjEqBr85dQKsc2ZNRCvOnsh6Erh4sJnvkKBVRq6y4

Edited by Keith Black
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17 hours ago, Knocklouder said:

Would the ship be moving  pretty fast , ramming speed?

That's a good question that you and @Louie da fly

raise.  It would likely be at ramming speed as the claw snags the end of the bottle, but the forward momentum would slow as it's pulled out of the water.  So maybe I need to extend the arm of the claw further over the bottle and angle the chain and hook towards the wall so it looks like the bottle continued moving forward as it was hooked.  Seems like that action would cause a small wave pushing forward.  Sort of like in the diagram below.  That would probably be enough to support the bottle securely.

Picture23.thumb.jpg.7b2c502e476bdbff85586c059df5c3a3.jpg

 

 

7 hours ago, Louie da fly said:

OTOH, how would a Roman ship attack the walls effectively? It'd surely have to get close enough for the crew to erect scaling ladders

Yes.  And that is where my presentation and reality go their separate ways!  The quinquereme, which is hiding safely from the claw inside the bottle, has a corvus for that purpose.  But I am not equipping the bottle with anything like that. 

 

I suspect a lot of people probably look at my work the same way they look at the giant head in your Byzantine picture and wonder, "What the heck was he thinking?"

 

 

6 hours ago, Keith Black said:

Glen, a piece of small diameter clear acrylic rod might work?

I love that idea, Keith.  I could probably hide that underneath pretty well.  Thanks!

Edited by Glen McGuire
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8 minutes ago, Ian_Grant said:

Glen, I thought the "claw" would be supporting the neck of the bottle anyway? 

Hey Ian, that was my original thought when I was first putting this idea together.  But I think my claw assembly may be too fragile to support much weight.  The claw's base and the cows are just glued to the surface and it would not take much to yank them out.   So I decided not put any stress on them.  

 

Also, as you will see when I get the final pieces in place, the hook is not real secure around the end of the bottle either.

Edited by Glen McGuire
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Quick update here and thanks to @Keith Black for his acrylic rod suggestion.  Being too impatient to wait for a shipment, I took his idea and came up with something similar using stuff I had on hand.  As modelers, we save everything, right?  So for a reason I could not explain to anyone outside this forum, I keep the leftover epoxy resin discs that harden in the bottom of whatever cup I'm using to pour from.  I've got several of these discs of varying sizes, and they are a nice shade of blue. 

 

Using Keith's idea as inspiration, I took one of the smaller discs, cut in in half, glued the 2 halves together, carved out the middle, then sanded it into a wedge shape that would fit between the rising bottle and my layer of water. 

20230908_165748.thumb.jpg.af4aba02abbfce3cc9f310d2f2fa6e83.jpg  20230908_170110.thumb.jpg.6dd86ae1b43c68001d7fefc6b17ed2fd.jpg

I will surround it with some gel gloss medium to create the look of a small bow wave which will hide it quite nicely I believe. 

 

I'm sure one of you engineers could figure this out with precise calculations, but I think I have the center of gravity now well to the right of the wedge, where it needs to be to keep the bottle secure at that angle.  The wedge sits right about the midpoint of the bottle's body.  Probably 3/4 of the epoxy inside the bottle is sitting to the right of the wedge.  Plus, the bottle itself has a thick base which I think more than offsets the weight of the bottle's neck.  If any of y'all think I've got this figured wrong, let me know!

Edited by Glen McGuire
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A very neat solution and beautifully presented SIB diorama Glen.  You do realise that you have set a very high bar for yourself now don't you ;) :)

 

cheers

 

Pat

If at first you do not suceed, try, and then try again!
Current build: HMCSS Victoria (Scratch)

Next build: HMAS Vampire (3D printed resin, scratch 1:350)

Built:          Battle Station (Scratch) and HM Bark Endeavour 1768 (kit 1:64)

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Smart solution for that support. I understand why you wouldn't want that claw to take any weight and your reasoning on the balance sounds solid. 

 

We understand....😂Hah.jpg.486d5ebf262272c8a95ab12aff50cdd0.jpg

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3 hours ago, Javelin said:

We understand....😂

LOL!!!  I knew I wasn't the only one!

 

On 9/10/2023 at 9:36 PM, BANYAN said:

You do realise that you have set a very high bar for yourself now don't you

Bars, bottles, Bundaburg...they all go together, don't they?  :cheers:

Edited by Glen McGuire
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After plenty of dry time, the bottle feels securely in place.  I think the process above worked well. 

 

Now it's time to try and bring some life to the water.  All the pictures I see of the real Syracuse sea wall show pretty calm waters around the jutting peninsula where the wall stands.  That means I don't want to go overboard with wild churning seas like I did for the Kraken.  So the first step here is adding a layer of small waves and ripples.  For that I use acrylic gel gloss medium.  It goes on white, but the pictures below show how it begins to clear as it dries.

20230910_104707.thumb.jpg.9ef366d9ead76a9ba406d5ef25b1b829.jpg

20230910_111505.thumb.jpg.b7559072a553b3fd7474e0168ac87a84.jpg

20230910_154355.thumb.jpg.1da257fb119efdbe031a9a9d9100a00c.jpg

 

While the gloss gel was drying, I turned my attention to the claw's hook that will grasp the raised tip of the bottle.  I wanted something that resembled a grappling hook.  I know absolutely nothing about fishing and proudly own the title of the world's worst fisherman, but I figured there had to be some kind of fishing hook that would work.  So I visited an unfamiliar aisle in the sporting goods store and found a package of large treble hooks that looked promising. 

 

The first thing I did was file off the sharp tines a bit so I didn't do something stupid with the hook.  Next, when I placed the hook against the bottle's opening, it fit nicely underneath, but wasn't tall enough for the tie loop to clear the top edge of the bottle's opening.  So I took a couple of the other hooks, cut off pieces of the shank, and solder-spliced them together for a longer shank.  It came out ok.   

20230910_134835.thumb.jpg.02634f5087e7bee2f44bccdc2b941fad.jpg    

   

Edited by Glen McGuire
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A couple of digressions during paint drying sessions...

 

First, I noticed an interesting characteristic of the epoxy resin I use.  It seems to leach upward given the chance.  A few hours after pouring the epoxy resin into my base, I noticed that more rocks below the base of the wall looked wet than anticipated.  A closer look showed that rocks well above the water line of the epoxy resin were indeed covered in epoxy.  And it pooled in the small cavities between the rocks above the water line.  In all, the epoxy resin looks to have leached up about 1/8".  In this case it's ok and actually adds to the effect of water meeting the rocks.  But I'll have to pay attention for future use if I don't want that look.  

20230913_075446.thumb.jpg.0a70842b8cb124a705debaf22bb83053.jpg

 

Second, I was texting pictures of the build progress to a friend of mine.  I sent him the 1 below.  He asked what the cow was doing on top of the wall.  I told him it was stationed up there to watch for incoming Roman ships during construction of the project. 

 

My friend replied, "Oh.  So it's a scowt!"  🙄🙄🙄

 

I told him he'd fit in well with the MSW crowd here. 

20230907_084147.thumb.jpg.6c9439f177c3468ecfe44dbecca427fd.jpg  

 

 

     

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15 minutes ago, Glen McGuire said:

It seems to leach upward given the chance

Yes I have had this problem with resin before. It is particularly problematic when you have a small space and can actually give the impression of the water "rising" in that spot. The more edges the resin has to "grab on to" the higher it will rise. You can mitigate this somewhat by pouring in multiple thin layers, but that has its own set of problems.

Edited by Thukydides
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 Scowts are bred for their climbing ability, some have even been known to climb ladders. 

image.png.690ec94e3a338876ca89ef8be5149707.png

 

 They were bred specifically to act as lookouts for predators endangering the herd. 

image.thumb.png.08f7e9a99c499e27ddba041ba383bb43.png

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4 minutes ago, Keith Black said:

 Scowts are bred for their climbing ability, some have even been known to climb ladders. 

 

That cow in the first pic looks like she got a little nervous based on what I see at her hooves.

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7 hours ago, Glen McGuire said:

It seems to leach upward given the chance. 

 

I would not worry about that Glen. It simply shows the tidal range. My advice is to “embrace the creep”.

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You know Glen, if you need to muddy the shore a bit you could use some of that cows nervousness , or Sacred Scowts Scat, because we can't use the B word lol.

Just fling it over, it should stick to anything  lol. 

  Did you know Christopher Columbus  brought  the start of the Texas Long Horn cattle  when he came to America the second time  in 1493? Who knew , Spanish Longhorns . Lol.

 Your work is so amazing my friend. 

 

:cheers:

Edited by Knocklouder

Start so you can Finish !!

Finished:            The  Santa Maria -Amati 1:65, La Pinta- Amati 1:65, La Nina -Amati 1:65 ,                                                Hannah Ship in a Bottle -1:300  The Sea of Galilee Boat-Scott Miller-1:20 ,The Mayflower Amati 1:60

non Ship Build:   1972 Ford Sport Custom Truck

 Current Build:    Viking Ship Drakkar -Amati-1:50

On Hold:            HMS Pegasus: Amati 

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5 hours ago, Knocklouder said:

Sacred Scowts Scat

You didn't really say that did you?  LOL!!!  We are exploring new depths in this build log!  :cheers:

 

5 hours ago, Knocklouder said:

Did you know Christopher Columbus  brought  the start of the Texas Long Horn cattle  when he came to America the second time  in 1493?

Actually I did know that.  And there were other famous explorers who played essential roles in the early development of the Texas longhorn breed.  In brief, Columbus brought Spanish horned cattle to Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic on his second voyage to the new world as you mention.  In the early 1500s, Spanish explorer Gregorio de Villalobos took some of the Spanish cattle to mainland Mexico.  Cortes also took some of those Spanish cattle from Santo Domingo to Mexico to support his expeditions.  In 1540, Coronado rounded up several hundred of the now Mexican horned cattle and used them to supply his expedition that would search for the golden Seven Cities of Cibola.  These became the first cattle to enter what is now Texas and were the forbearers of what became Texas Longhorns. 

 

That's a very abbreviated version of their history as recorded by J. Frank Dobie in his 1941 classic, "The Longhorns".  That book is considered the Bible around here for longhorn history. 
 

 

Edited by Glen McGuire
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The acrylic medium gloss gel finally dried, but I was not satisfied with the look.  It just did not set up very well and did not really seem like natural looking water movement.  Usually, I use it inside the bottle in a small, confined space, so maybe it does not work as well over a larger area.  Or maybe I just did a poor job of working it into wave shapes.  Regardless, I decided on a plan B and ordered some Woodland Scenics - Water Ripples and watched some Youtube videos on how to use it.  

20230914_204410.thumb.jpg.3715b8ea12622c2d402a90195afdad70.jpg

The Woodland Scenics product definitely has a different consistency than the gloss gel I used previously.  I started out by trying it on the far back corner of my base that will be mostly out of sight.  I spread it on a small area using a little spatula to dab it around and then let it dry to see the results.  I really liked how it kind of self-settled into more natural looking water waves and ripples.  Satisfied with my test area, I covered the whole base with it.  Going forward, I think it will be my go-to for water texture.

 

Here's a good look at a larger area of the water after the Woodland Scenics product dried.  So my water now has 4 layers to give it a real 3D effect – paint, epoxy resin, acrylic gloss gel medium, and the Woodland Scenics product.  But I don’t think I’ll use the gloss gel in the future.  I'm really happy with how the different colors of the water turned out.  
20230914_075057.thumb.jpg.832010fdb4020d3e407fcb59a0da8c7b.jpg

 

Next, I wanted to add some froth to the area under the bottle where the edge of the bottle meets the water.  For that I used cotton unfurled from the ends of q-tips diluted with white glue.

20230914_075116.thumb.jpg.16e9fdf2adb47c6239137b4289cbda27.jpg

 

 

Next, I added a few random, small whitecaps around the deeper parts of the water.  Then I finished it off by adding foam where the water hits the rocks at the shoreline.  I made the whitecaps and foam with q-tip cotton and diluted white glue like I did for the froth underneath the boat.  I like q-tips for this better than cotton balls because the q-tip cotton will unfurl into longer strings which are good for lining the edges of small waves.    

20230914_080005.thumb.jpg.3f98df9f48e5a2acb73aa5ba633b5e9e.jpg

 

The last thing I did was revisit my grass on the other side of the wall.  I thought the green looked too much like a golf course (too uniform) so I dirtied it up a bit with some random brownish splotches.  

 

And with that, I’m calling this beastie done.  I’ll take some final pics and put them in the next post. 

Edited by Glen McGuire
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Can't wait to see the finished pictures,  wow do you do some nice work my friend. As I follow along on your SIB , they get more and more adventureres and amazing  . One can't help but imagine what  you will come up next to top this sensational  build.  Congratulations  it's     

BEER time,:cheers: :cheers:

Start so you can Finish !!

Finished:            The  Santa Maria -Amati 1:65, La Pinta- Amati 1:65, La Nina -Amati 1:65 ,                                                Hannah Ship in a Bottle -1:300  The Sea of Galilee Boat-Scott Miller-1:20 ,The Mayflower Amati 1:60

non Ship Build:   1972 Ford Sport Custom Truck

 Current Build:    Viking Ship Drakkar -Amati-1:50

On Hold:            HMS Pegasus: Amati 

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Great result. Glossy acrylic gel is indeed difficult to work with. Very sticky and doesn't really flow. You can dilute it with water to make it flow, but does lose its glossy finish then... 

Your solution definately does wonders. 

Your coloring of the bottom really gives a great and realistic effect.:imNotWorthy:

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10 hours ago, Ian_Grant said:

This build will be hard to top.....

Actually, Ian, I think the build log will be harder to top than the build itself!  This has been by far the most entertaining build log for me thanks to all of y’all.  Over the last few months, we’ve somehow worked all of the following into the conversation:  

  • Historical figures like Eratosthenes, Polybius, Archimedes and Heron as well as Byzantine pictures of ancient vessels.   
  • Animals like penguins, war penguins, war dolphins, war pigs, climbing cows, Galapagos penguins, iguanas, and something called blue-footed boobies.  😲
  • Less than appealing animal related things like iguana snot, seagull poop, and my personal favorite - sacred scowts scat.  
  • Movies and TV shows like Indiana Jones, White Men Can’t Jump, Rocky, Toy Story, Mission Impossible, and Get Smart.
  • Other miscellaneous topics like the Galapagos’ Post Office Bay, the calculation of manpower per oar, and the devil’s own green matchheads, just to name a few.
  • And on and on and on…

Seriously though, I want to offer a sincere thank you to everyone that took part in this build along the way:  @Keith Black, @Ian_Grant, @Knocklouder, @Javelin, @Louie da fly, @BANYAN, @gjdale, @mtaylor, @Canute, @Thukydides, @GrandpaPhil, @John Fox III, @Landlubber Mike, @Roger Pellett, @CiscoH, @Bryan Woods, @gsdpic, @FriedClams, @Boccherini, @ccoyle, @Snug Harbor Johnny, @O.B.one, @hollowneck, @Ryland Craze, @JacquesCousteau, @VitusBering, @Chief Mark, @chris watton.  


Whether you popped in every so often or stuck with it for the whole dang production, your comments, suggestions, and encouragement on the myriad of issues I encountered pushed me forward and helped make the build so much better than it would've been had I just tried this on my own.  And your sense of humor kept me smiling and laughing every step of the way.   I simply cannot thank each of you enough.  Y'all are my heroes.

 

Here are pictures of the completed project.  I'll start with the original concept drawing for comparison of the idea to the finished product.

Picture1.thumb.jpg.91457684e586342d7fa664286c6a2833.jpg

 

 

Gallery1.thumb.jpg.344b487b5c9822b13d6f85121406e5d4.jpg

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Gallery4.thumb.jpg.155bb6e05912ddff628e044fb41c57aa.jpg

Gallery5.thumb.jpg.6b518830980c0635a69eb78d78454d16.jpg

Edited by Glen McGuire
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More wows  lol   :cheers:

Start so you can Finish !!

Finished:            The  Santa Maria -Amati 1:65, La Pinta- Amati 1:65, La Nina -Amati 1:65 ,                                                Hannah Ship in a Bottle -1:300  The Sea of Galilee Boat-Scott Miller-1:20 ,The Mayflower Amati 1:60

non Ship Build:   1972 Ford Sport Custom Truck

 Current Build:    Viking Ship Drakkar -Amati-1:50

On Hold:            HMS Pegasus: Amati 

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Amazing work Glen! I bet you’re already knocking those ideas around for the next wonder:-)

Current builds: Captain John Smith’s shallop - Pavel Nikitin
Back on the shelf: Gretel - Mamoli

completed builds:

Sea of Galilee boat

Lowell Grand Banks dory

Norwegian sailing pram

Muscongus bay lobster smack

Peterboro Canoe- Midwest

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Well done!  Another tremendously creative and entertaining build.  Maybe the first time on MSW that the builder used his own livestock as the prototype for part of the build!

- Gary

 

Current Build: Artesania Latina Sopwith Camel

Completed Builds: Blue Jacket America 1/48th  Annapolis Wherry

 

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