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Posted

I have noticed a lot of models with a curious little horseshoe shaped piece let into the keel by the forefoot. What is it's purpose? It seems to be to strengthen the connection down there but I would think a simple plate would be easier to fashion as well as stronger. Could anyone help me out. Never seen that before.

Posted

It is actually called a horseshoe plate and does strengthen the complex three-piece joint there. Actually, there is a plate on each side, and the bolts pass right through. Most models do not show this detail, but it was there on the actual ships.

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Posted

Druxey,

 

Was that a purely English item?  Do you know if other nations used it?

Mark
"The shipwright is slow, but the wood is patient." - me

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Posted

That Great Lakes ship's bow is how I would envision it to be. Seems there's so much more effort to fabricate a horseshoe shaped piece than a straight flat piece. Or a circular plate. Thanks for the answers guys. Anybody know when they stopped using them?

Posted

'Fish' in the sense used here refers to joining together. An example is fishing a cracked yard with a reinforcement piece. In England, the pieces joining two lengths of railway line rail together were called fish plates. It's quite possible that the word was a corruption from French 'afficher', to stick or put together.

Be sure to sign up for an epic Nelson/Trafalgar project if you would like to see it made into a TV series  http://trafalgar.tv

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