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Posted
On 8/27/2024 at 8:03 PM, clearway said:

ahhh the memories of doing the same with my hms vicky ..... oh the joy!!!

 

Keith

I used plates on my Victory and tape on the Indefatigable, not sure i will go back to tiles again

2019 02 february hobby victory (66).JPG

2024 01 January dobbie apollo (215).JPG

  • 1 month later...
Posted (edited)

good evening everyone

 

im back, well i never really went away, just got lost in the mists of real life and bring two young dogs up, so apologies for those that follow me and i will be back with my regular updates and general bad model making and sillyness

the copper tiling on the hull was completed, i may have undersized to tiles, and seam to take ages to complete, sealed with a matt acrylic varnish

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in tried to make her up as in the museum photo, with guns run out and lids shut, but the cannom muzzels are to thick to fit through the port, so i put each barrel in a drill and turn them on a file

after and before

they fitted ok, but were then not high enough (1.5mm) so i fitted some feet on, and a few brass rings to break up the amount of black this hull has

 

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the last few photos were taken yesterday, with the lower main mast done, but that brings her UpToDate. 

 

the bois 

Odin on the left 5 months and Apollo 14 months

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Edited by Kevin
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

good evening everyone

 

thank you for the likes

 

the bowsprit, foremast and main are mainly complete now, with the exception of blocks mizzen is ready to be assembled

 

came across another hurdle to cross today, the whole kit and that of the Santa Felipe is only supported with one size of block, 4mm singles and doubles, and they are not very good ones at that BUT im not slating the kit, it just that its odd that if they want to encourage others into the hobby, do they want newbes to think one size fits all

anyway i have ordered some more cheap blocks from Cornwall Model boats 2mm singles, and 3mm singles and doubles, and then i quess i am going to have to think about rigging thread sizes

 

 

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  • 2 weeks later...
Posted (edited)

Good morning everyone,

 

as we get towards the later part of the year, i am getting more productive in the man cave, mainly because the bois are getting older, and i am getting more sleep, in turn allowing myself to get into a routine again.

Apollo 15 months

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Odin 5 Months

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Belle Pouple continues to fight me, as much as I wanted to complete her OOB, I am having to change a lot of things on her, and as a result, she is looking quite tatty, and very messy, a lot of it is cosmetic and will clean up, but I feel i will have a "to be laughed at build" but will continue and try to complete her by the end of the year.

Having made up the foremast i then looked at some of the over scaled pin rails and shorted them by 1cm, also going to use much smaller belaying pins.

Belle Pou[le does not have deadeyes coming from the channels, but a series of stanchions which (to me look like turnbuckles, so I have tried to reproduce something like that, however  then found it is quite awkward to get a decent tension on the shrouds as they tend to pull in, and group the shrouds to close, 

Using .5mm copper wire looped at one end with a thimble.

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the wire is threaded through the sheaving from a roll of wire, with a couple bits of plastic tubing to resemble the parts of a turnbuckle

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then painted and i have this

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personally i think it looks better than the kit 

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and somewhere towards the museum photo (not my image)

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Edited by Kevin
Posted

In fact the 'Pretty Chicken' was quite a modern ship at the time and some advanced features were tried out on her. 

 

Instead of deadeyes or bottle-screws (which at that time did not really exist yet, due to the difficulty of producing consistent machine-screws before Maudsley invented the the lead-screw for lathes), some French ships used a sort of rack-and-lever system. If you have ever seen a device that was used in the old days to suspend a cauldron at adjustable heights over an open fire, that's the same system. I am still looking for a picture that illustrates this ... somewhere in my books I have a picture ...

 

I suppose you could fashion this system from piercing saws with a fine pitch ...

wefalck

 

panta rhei - Everything is in flux

 

 

M-et-M-72.jpg  Banner-AKHS-72.jpg  Banner-AAMM-72.jpg  ImagoOrbis-72.jpg
Posted
26 minutes ago, wefalck said:

In fact the 'Pretty Chicken' was quite a modern ship at the time and some advanced features were tried out on her. 

 

thank you @wefalckNot heard of that before "pretty Chicken"

Posted

Found a picture, from

 

BREART, E. (1885): Manuel du Gréement et de la Manœuvre des bâtiments à voile et à vapeur. Comprenant les matières exigées pour l’obtention du Brevet de Capitaine au long cours et de Maître au cabotage.- 459+13 p., 7 pl., Paris (Librairie Scientifique, industrielle et agricole, Eugène Lacroix).

 

It's from a later period, but the left most illustration shows the principle that I remember having seen on the model in the Musée de la Marine (unfortunately lighting was not very conducive to taking pictures):

image.thumb.png.2af9afe8091b27feca39e9785f35e8ce.png

The lever in Fig. 5, not fully drawn flips down parallel to the toothed rack and is tied against it.

 

Such 'high-tech' solutions were not widespread in the navies, probably because battle damage would be more difficult to repair than the traditional system with deadeyes and lanyards.

 

Before diving deeper into the rigging, you may want to get hold of some of the French literature on masting and rigging of the time, which can downloaded from the site of the French National Library: https://gallica.bnf.fr/, Unlike for the Google digitalisations, they unfold the tables in full!

 

COSTE. F.-A. (18292): Manuel de Gréement ou l’art d’équiper les vaisseaux et autres batimens de mer, de tout ce qui est nécessaire a leurs mouvements.-  282 p., tables, Paris (Dezauche).

 

Jaÿ, . (1860): Études sur le Greément d’après les réglement du 25 avril 1857, révisé en 1858.- Atlas du Génie Maritime, 2éme Serie, Annexe No. 1: 55 pl., Paris (Ministère de la Marine et des Colonies).

 

VERDIER, M. (1837): Nouveau manuel complet de la marine. Premiere Partie. Gréement.- 290 p., Paris (Librairie Enciclopédique de Roret).

 

Also, I would perouse @archjofo's building log here on LA CREOLE of 1827, which has wealth of information on French rigging in the second quarter of the 19th century.

 

wefalck

 

panta rhei - Everything is in flux

 

 

M-et-M-72.jpg  Banner-AKHS-72.jpg  Banner-AAMM-72.jpg  ImagoOrbis-72.jpg
Posted
3 minutes ago, wefalck said:

Found a picture, from

 

BREART, E. (1885): Manuel du Gréement et de la Manœuvre des bâtiments à voile et à vapeur. Comprenant les matières exigées pour l’obtention du Brevet de Capitaine au long cours et de Maître au cabotage.- 459+13 p., 7 pl., Paris (Librairie Scientifique, industrielle et agricole, Eugène Lacroix).

 

It's from a later period, but the left most illustration shows the principle that I remember having seen on the model in the Musée de la Marine (unfortunately lighting was not very conducive to taking pictures):

 

image.thumb.png.2af9afe8091b27feca39e9785f35e8ce.png

The lever in Fig. 5, not fully drawn flips down parallel to the toothed rack and is tied against it.

 

Such 'high-tech' solutions were not widespread in the navies, probably because battle damage would be more difficult to repair than the traditional system with deadeyes and lanyards.

 

Before diving deeper into the rigging, you may want to get hold of some of the French literature on masting and rigging of the time, which can downloaded from the site of the French National Library: https://gallica.bnf.fr/, Unlike for the Google digitalisations, they unfold the tables in full!

 

 

COSTE. F.-A. (18292): Manuel de Gréement ou l’art d’équiper les vaisseaux et autres batimens de mer, de tout ce qui est nécessaire a leurs mouvements.-  282 p., tables, Paris (Dezauche).

 

Jaÿ, . (1860): Études sur le Greément d’après les réglement du 25 avril 1857, révisé en 1858.- Atlas du Génie Maritime, 2éme Serie, Annexe No. 1: 55 pl., Paris (Ministère de la Marine et des Colonies).

 

VERDIER, M. (1837): Nouveau manuel complet de la marine. Premiere Partie. Gréement.- 290 p., Paris (Librairie Enciclopédique de Roret).

 

Also, I would perouse @archjofo's building log here on LA CREOLE of 1827, which has wealth of information on French rigging in the second quarter of the 19th century.

 

thankyou @wefalck for that info, very much appreciated 

Posted (edited)

While searching for something else in my picture archive, I came across a couple of pictures of mechanism used for tensioning the shrouds on BELLE POULE. I took them some ten years ago in the museum on request by someone:

image.thumb.png.b4e23f7056cc5051da72cbe86f772ad9.png

image.thumb.png.8a66b75ad99f23ca30a6ea7de8905aa9.png

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Edited by wefalck

wefalck

 

panta rhei - Everything is in flux

 

 

M-et-M-72.jpg  Banner-AKHS-72.jpg  Banner-AAMM-72.jpg  ImagoOrbis-72.jpg
Posted
16 hours ago, wefalck said:

While searching for something else in my picture archive, I came across a couple of pictures of mechanism used for tensioning the shrouds on BELLE POULE. I took them some ten years ago in the museum on request by someone:

 

 

 

thank you for them, 1 will have to see if i can adapt what i have put in place

Posted
On 11/9/2024 at 6:06 AM, Kevin said:

thank you @wefalckNot heard of that before "pretty Chicken"

In fact, it should be the "Beautiful Hen" rather than the Pretty Chicken. Also, in French slang, a "Poule" is a girl !!!

 

Yves

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