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Filling in between bulkheads


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It makes the hull more solid and helps to prevent warping down the road.  It will also make it easier to find the hull's symetry.  You also have more surface to glue your planking down with no shallow dips.

David B

Edited by dgbot
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I prefer to fill in between the bulkheads for the reasons others have stated plus it helps in fairing the hull. Also I don't like double planking, and the wood supplied usually bites, so I mill my own planks and having the spaces filled in helps with single planking.

   Ron W.

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  • 2 weeks later...

I think a lot has to do with the model itself.  If the bulkheads are thin, then filling in a bit or doubling the heads would give you more surface to adhere too.   Where as thicker out of the box bulkheads are an adequate gluing surface.

I had to add with material on the sides of the bulkheads as they were much thinner than the material list stated. I used basswood for this.

However I added on with wood at the edge level and about 1cm inwards, didn't see the purpose of covering the whole bulkhead. post-967-0-25623100-1384900810_thumb.jpg

It's not as porous as balsa and can handle CA glue much better as well.

As for the filler I used 3/16 basswood against bulkhead and false keel then added with a balsa block. Once that was dried, I "painted" the balsa surface with diluted Titebond I, this way the combination of CA and Titebond I will have plenty of grip area.

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  • 4 weeks later...

All very well when the ribbing is a solid bulkhead across the full beam of the ship. What do you do when (1) the ship model has all open ribs, and (2) one side of the model will be left mostly unplanked so the interior details can be seen. In this case, adding material, while perhaps even more important for the strength and trueness of the fore/aft line, becomes much more problematic. What to do? I'm building HMS Bounty with some rad curves stem and stern and its been suggested I add some material to the ribs at least in those areas. I want to take the suggestion but am not sure how. I am thinking (its been suggested by Amfibius) that I use scrap from the templates that the ribs came off of.

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All very well when the ribbing is a solid bulkhead across the full beam of the ship. What do you do when (1) the ship model has all open ribs, and (2) one side of the model will be left mostly unplanked so the interior details can be seen. In this case, adding material, while perhaps even more important for the strength and trueness of the fore/aft line, becomes much more problematic. What to do? I'm building HMS Bounty with some rad curves stem and stern and its been suggested I add some material to the ribs at least in those areas. I want to take the suggestion but am not sure how. I am thinking (its been suggested by Amfibius) that I use scrap from the templates that the ribs came off of.

Hi Captain Al

In this case you just fill in between the desired area.Rather than try and explain I include a link to Drazen's log.Notice how he is infilling  between the upperpart of the frames but still leaving the hull hollow.You can do this for the full profile of the hull to one side only.

Kind Regards Nigel

 

http://modelshipworld.com/index.php?/topic/911-de-zeven-provinci%C3%ABn-by-dra%C5%BEen-cari%C4%87-scale-1-45-1665/page-3

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