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Bluenose by John Kendziorski - FINISHED - Model Shipways - 1:64


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Kit arrived 12/31/14. Photocopied keel drawings onto drafting vellum, and began study of differences between those and the laser cuts. Some cuts are not perpendicular to the faces of the keel. Will sand those square and shim if necessary. An inch or two of the fore-section bends a bit to the right. Any suggestions for straightening that? Sheet of large bulkheads is warped. Blocks between them should correct most of that. Meanwhile, carefully removing the char will keep me suitably entertained.

 

Hmm, just noticed that all three sections of the keel are 0.5-1.5mm short of the drawing. Maybe I can add material to flesh that out.

 

John

"Anything can be made to work if you don't fiddle with it too much."
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Keel joined. Transferred bearding and rabbet lines to the port side by burnishing the vellum photocopies. Starboard side scored through the vellum. Then both sides scored with straightedge and ships curve. Now struggling to chisel as needed. Feeling frustratingly incompetent, but will soldier on. Meanwhile, the bulkheads are coming around. Stanchions, after thinning, seem too fragile to continue without a spot of cyano to weld the wood fibers. The drawings are not as precise as I was used to in my profession, but I enjoy the challenge of learning how to interpret them correctly.

"Anything can be made to work if you don't fiddle with it too much."
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John,

 

From the East side of the same state, a very warm :sign:
I am about to enter the journey of building the MS Bluenose, I am awaiting deck planking from HobbyMill.

As far as hull planking I am sticking with the basswood coming with the kit.

Deck will get a combo of boxwood and maple.

So I am looking forward to see what you are coming up with. :) :)

 

Please, visit our Facebook page!

 

Respectfully

 

Per aka Dr. Per@Therapy for Shipaholics 
593661798_Keepitreal-small.jpg.f8a2526a43b30479d4c1ffcf8b37175a.jpg

Finished: T37, BB Marie Jeanne - located on a shelf in Sweden, 18th Century Longboat, Winchelsea Capstan

Current: America by Constructo, Solö Ruff, USS Syren by MS, Bluenose by MS

Viking funeral: Harley almost a Harvey

Nautical Research Guild Member - 'Taint a hobby if you gotta hurry

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Please, visit our Facebook page!

 

Respectfully

 

Per aka Dr. Per@Therapy for Shipaholics 
593661798_Keepitreal-small.jpg.f8a2526a43b30479d4c1ffcf8b37175a.jpg

Finished: T37, BB Marie Jeanne - located on a shelf in Sweden, 18th Century Longboat, Winchelsea Capstan

Current: America by Constructo, Solö Ruff, USS Syren by MS, Bluenose by MS

Viking funeral: Harley almost a Harvey

Nautical Research Guild Member - 'Taint a hobby if you gotta hurry

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Found a small [2 3/4"] suction vise with rubber jaws for $15 at Home Depot. Sure beats trying to hold these pieces between my arthritic digits. Makes for short work removing the char on the bulkheads. Decided to bevel them after installation [with due care at the stanchions]. Feel I'll do a better job with battens in place showing how the planks will want to lie. Waiting for that 1/8" chisel to arrive so I can work on the rabbeting. Golly, that keel will be just 1/16" thick, presuming I don't over cut! Think I'll make a jig to support it until a plank can be glued in.

 

John

Edited by Laker
"Anything can be made to work if you don't fiddle with it too much."
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Bulkheads in place. Two of them got slightly out of square for some reason. I'll deal with this later after some head scratching.

 

Glad I waited to fair the bhs until after installation.

 

Bad luck with the filler blocks aft of bh "O", including running a blade into my thumb. Uff da!

Edited by Laker
"Anything can be made to work if you don't fiddle with it too much."
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Persistence pays. I crafted those filler blocks and made good tenons on the masts.

 

Now trying to figure out the thickness of the filler blocks between the quarter frame and either the fake stanchion or the stanchion at bh O. The two drawings related to this area are confusing. If the filler is 1/8" thick, what's the need for a fake stanchion between bhd O and the quarter frame? Can anyone clarify this for me?

 

Meanwhile, worked on the bhd stanchions. Three broke clean off and two others showed signs of near breakage, all during what I consider normal handling and work procedures. Hmm. Waterways are next. Intend to install the first course inside the bhds then fill between stanchions before going on to the second inside course. The quarter deck will be something else.

 

John

Edited by Laker
"Anything can be made to work if you don't fiddle with it too much."
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Moving along with the deck planks. You know, planking can be good contemplative work. Opted to simply follow the arc of the waterways, forming a herringbone effect over the keel. Not authentic, but handsome in its way. Trimmed just right, the planks snap into place and hold themselves without clamping. At most, a little finger pressure until the tack of the glue takes over. Before installing the outermost waterway, I'll use the plan drawing to design replacements for the broken stanchions, which now number seven, all from the same sheet. Hmm.

 

post-14999-0-82604800-1421769520.jpg

 

Final result:

post-14999-0-09096400-1421769840.jpg

Edited by Laker
"Anything can be made to work if you don't fiddle with it too much."
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I broke more stanchions before completing the deck, so I opted to remove them all. After installing the outer waterways plank, I referred to the drawings to begin engineering the replacements. And here I discovered that the drawings and the laser-cut bulkheads are not symmetrical; one half is not the mirror image of the other. I suggest any future builder check these things carefully.

 

So here's how she looks without stanchions.

 

post-14999-0-08160400-1421770343.jpg

 

Opted to build up the areas of the stanchions with solid wood, starting with 1/8"2 which I bent into shape, or nearly so. Will have to guess at the outward sweep towards the prow and the inward sweep toward the stern. Will build up as needed to meet the main rail. Scuppers won't appear inboards, but they can appear outboard. All in all, this seems a satisfactory solution to those fragile stanchions.

Edited by Laker
"Anything can be made to work if you don't fiddle with it too much."
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  • 2 months later...

This has been quite a challenge, but I’ve enjoyed every success, failure, broken assembly, all of it, except the quality of the kit. I really wanted to build a good looking model, but I realized early on that for me this would be a practice model, a mere reasonable facsimile of the Bluenose, so I’m just going with the flow, doing what I can, fudging some, and ignoring whatever is beyond my skill level. Most of the deck furniture is in place and work on the masts begun. I’ll use black paper and mini eyebolts made from 26 gauge black-coated copper wire. (I’ve no experience at soldering, and I don’t want to deal with the strong chemicals to blacken brass.) Purchased some parts: brass helm from Harbor Models; pintles/gudgeons and strapped deadeyes from BlueJacket; brass transfer lettering from Letraset. The scroll work around the hawse pipes comes out of my wife’s findings trays, as will the mockup turnbuckles.

 

post-14999-0-34514600-1428255689_thumb.jpg

post-14999-0-06758400-1428255715_thumb.jpg

 

A medium point gold-ink ball pen did the thin line.

post-14999-0-22564600-1428255951.jpg

 

 

About the kit: It is a disappointment because of the poor quality of the MS castings and the heavy charring of the laser cuts, most of which were at an angle rather than being perpendicular to the face. The rings for the mast coats, boom rest, and pin saddle measure 3/8”+ID while the masts are only 5/16”OD. I wondered if this kit was meant for the accomplished modeler with a well-furnished shop. Did I just get an “as-is” bargain (it wasn’t at bargain cost), or are most MS kits this way? I’m asking a question; that’s all.

 

post-14999-0-94169100-1428256031.jpg

 

Two versions of turnbuckles. They'll be half this length on the model.

 

The ME paint kit for the Bluenose was even more disappointing, and I don’t recommend it. Inconsistent viscosity from jar to jar, difficult to brush without leaving marks, tacky even after several days of drying. I found far better paints at the fabric store and for far less cost. Better coverage, a true flat finish, less drying time, and no tack.

 

Laker

(John)

Edited by Laker
"Anything can be made to work if you don't fiddle with it too much."
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Wow John! She's looking fantastic!

 

If this is only a practice model, I can't wait to see your next effort. Beautiful work. I have this same model though I haven't opened mine yet. I'm strating with smaller (and much simpler) boats and working up to the larger ones like the Bluenose.

 

Don

Current Build: Chesapeake Bay Flattie by Midwest Products

Completed Builds:  Chesapeake Bay Crabbing Skiff by Midwest Products

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  • 2 weeks later...

Made a fair-looking waterline using 6mm Tamiya masking tape. Had to freehand the sweep under the stern—a little shaky there. Transfer letters didn’t work, so I printed hull/stern name plates on photo stock; couldn’t get a good color match because I’d chosen to paint the hull midnight blue. Prefab pintles/gudgeons and deadeyes/plates worked well enough, but had to thin the pintles/gudgeons to fit between rudder and sternpost. Mast/boom/gaff dowels were arc-ed; tried to use the convex sides as is while flattening the concave. Used aluminum paint to represent the various metal bands. Masking helped, but opted to freehand most of them—again, a little shaky. Booms and gaffs will get similar treatment.

 

Base is a piece of tile. I rather like it for color and its seascape look.

post-14999-0-17815500-1429804454.jpgpost-14999-0-99710200-1429804480.jpg

 

Still, she’s a good-looking model, and I’ve been contentedly entertained for the four months it’s taken to get this far. Having a philosophical nature, I find similarities to the process of aging--accepting, even chuckling at, little setbacks along the way.

 

John

Edited by Laker
"Anything can be made to work if you don't fiddle with it too much."
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  • 4 weeks later...

post-14999-0-81218200-1431962500.jpgFinal Bluenose post from me. I've taken it as far as I'm willing to. Might have to revise my motto because more things broke as I tried to repair others. She sits above my work station, and I have to say I'm amazed that she turned out as handsome as she did.

 

Next, Constructo's Louise.

 

John

Edited by Laker
"Anything can be made to work if you don't fiddle with it too much."
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John, very nice job. Congrats!

 

Please, visit our Facebook page!

 

Respectfully

 

Per aka Dr. Per@Therapy for Shipaholics 
593661798_Keepitreal-small.jpg.f8a2526a43b30479d4c1ffcf8b37175a.jpg

Finished: T37, BB Marie Jeanne - located on a shelf in Sweden, 18th Century Longboat, Winchelsea Capstan

Current: America by Constructo, Solö Ruff, USS Syren by MS, Bluenose by MS

Viking funeral: Harley almost a Harvey

Nautical Research Guild Member - 'Taint a hobby if you gotta hurry

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Greetings John,

 

Based on the outcome of this model, I'd say you are ready for the big leagues. I like Constructo kits and have built two: Yacht America and Enterprise. I have there kit of Pilar, Hemingway's fishing boat which I will build next. Constructo kits are generally less expensive than other European kits and, therefore, require more effort to finish up into an outstanding model. However, they provide a solid platform for a really good build if you put the effort in.

 

wq3296 

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