Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Greetings Group,

 

Back in 2017 shortly after finishing Confederacy, I attempted my first Ancre scratch build, La Renommee.  I have always been in love with this Frigate and her unique lines.  I, however did not possess the skills yet to do her justice, nor a mastery of my recently purchased tools (chisels, Byrnes Machines, Sanders, and my first mill).  Raising small children and establishing a new business also provided problematic to achieving my goal of building this ship.

 

I worked on a few other projects including Le Gros Ventre in 1/36 scale which did increase my skills with the scroll saw, sharpening and working with chisels and scrapers, the Proxxon MF70, reading plans, building a build site and milling wood.  However after a 2 year break and revisiting my progress I noticed, being new to creating frames, they were too large and would require a heck of a lot of sanding to get to spec.  Also the Proxxon MF70 while not a bad tool, is not nearly as accurate as my recently acquired TAIG mill.  I really wanted to give all the keel parts another go with this tool.  The question became do I re do Le Gros Ventre, or work on one of the other Mongraphs I own in both 1/36 and 1/48 scale (Egyptienne, Renommee Amarante, Requin to name a few)

 

A friend has shared the frame drawings of La Renommee 1/48 fully laid out (in the Monograph Boudriot only drafts half frames) and easy to print on my home computer.  These are a god send vs running to the local UPS store to make copies over and over again (my experience with Le Gros Ventres frames).  After running some tests I found I do like the smaller scale of 1/48 (at least so far) as it gives me the option to rig later. So Ive sharpened all the tools, cleaned up the workshop and La Renommee was started again two weeks ago.

 

So far I have completed 14 frames that are very accurate with only about .5mm of fat.  As you can see the notches on the frames are a bit complicated.  I can not image this build without having a good mill.  I have some black hornbeam on the way from Hobbymill in Europe to use instead of ebony for the black parts and plenty of Pear I've collected over the years.  I will need to learn metal work in the not too distant future and carving in the really distant future, however I am confident with some good coaching I'll get there.

 

 

 

Frame Drying.jpg

Frame Notch.jpg

14 Frames.jpg

Posted

Another topic to watch, I'm sitting in the front row. La Renomme is a beautiful ship. May you be successful.

- Pavel -

Sorry, my english is bad, I must use a translator.

 

Praise makes you happy, but criticism makes you better.

 

Posted

I look forward to your new build, Chris. Had to laugh at your "smaller scale of 1:48" comment. I'm currently rigging a French warship of that era and the masts and spars are massive! Boudriot's rigging plans are superb though.

Greg

website
Admiralty Models

moderator Echo Cross-section build
Admiralty Models Cross-section Build

Finished build
Pegasus, 1776, cross-section

Current build
Speedwell, 1752

Posted

Thanks Pavel !  

 

The modelers on the French site swear by 1/36th scale Greg as Im sure you're aware !  This frigate in 1/48 will still be over 36 inches in length unrigged so by no means "small" 

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...