[:D]
I can’t have mine at the bench. He’s nosy and keeps sticking his head in the way. When you tell him to get out of the way, he licks you!
I talk to the ghosts of models gone by.
I’ve become my dog. I spend all day sleeping, yearning for car rides, or wandering around the house looking for something to eat…
Strawberry shortcake?_
Hi all!
Some small updates:
20200408_073005 by Jose Gonzales, on Flickr
I’ve mounted the bowsprit, installed the gammoning (my first real rigging on the model), and stropped the spritsail yard. I defaulted to the revell yard instead of trying to make one from the wood dowels that came with the BlueJacket kit. After painting the yard Modelmalster Aircraft Interior Black, I figured it looked plenty good enough. I have, however, carved a jib boom from the dowels becase the revell plastic version looks a little ragged due to the molds being so old. Pics to come.
20200408_073019 by Jose Gonzales, on Flickr
I’ve installed ringbolts on the spar deck to retract the slides carrying the carronades. I will not mount the training tackles for all guns, but perhaps I may install one and crew the gun - perhaps firing the morning salute. I’ve also carved and mounted a couple of larger cleates for the main braces. I am now facing a dilemma - whether or not to install bumpkins on either side of the stern for the main braces. From my previous builds, I know the braces have a tendency to rub against the boats mounted in the stern davits; bumpkins might spread the braces out far enough so that they won’t run into the boats. If I recall correctly, Evan (Force9) tried outfitting bumpkins (aka boomkins) - I’ll review his build for ideas. The Hull model does not have them, and I believe the Corne paintings of Constitution vs Guerriere don’t show theim, but the Ware plans of the USS United States (Constitution’s sister ship and one of the original 6 US frigates) do show them:
45-Ware-15-DeckPlans by Jose Gonzales, on Flickr
Note - the Ware plans are available from the USS Constitutution Museum website under modeler’s references. Revell clearly consulted these plans, especially in regard to the spar deck boat posiions over the main hatch.
You’ll be ok as long as you don’t start licking people or barking all night. [:)]
I created a serving machine from scrap pieces of wood and a set of gears ordered from an online toy store
20200418_212832 by Jose Gonzales, on Flickr
20200419_175156 by Jose Gonzales, on Flickr
I patterned it after the pictures on the Syren website of their serving machine, though mine is quite a bit simpler. The wood joints were reinforced by drilling through the wood joints with a pin vise drill and inserting brass rod.
I have installed 2 of 3 of the bowsprit bobstays.
20200421_000428 by Jose Gonzales, on Flickr
20200421_000633 by Jose Gonzales, on Flickr
Interesting differences in the depiction of the bobstays between Revell, BlueJacket, and my other resources. Revell would have you install 6 separate bobstays, 3 per side (3 pairs of separate lines with separate bullseye assemblies for each) while BlueJacket would have you install only 3 bullseyes attached to 3 single lines. The current ship and the previously cited Erik Olafson book say that the bobstays are actually 3 big loops of rope, rope lengths whose ends have been spliced together to form a loop. Th rope passes through holes in the stem/knee at the head of the ship, and have a deadeye siezed at the other end of the loop. The bowsprit has deadeye lashed to it , and the bobstay’s deadeye is lashed to the bowsprit deadeye by a lanyard running between them. It is this version that I have chosen to model. I drilled 3 holes through the stem/knee, passed a length of line through each hole, then spliced the ends to form a closed loop. I siezed the deadeyes to the ends of the bobstays and lashed them to deadeyes on the bowsprit with a lanyard. The deadeyes were 3/32’ dia from BlueJacket Shipcrafters, and came with the BlueJacket Constitution kit that I’m bashing with the Revell kit. Next up - the bowsprit shrouds.
Here’s a link to the USS Constitution Museum webpage describing recent restoration work on the bobstays: https://ussconstitutionmuseum.org/2017/04/20/springtime-for-uss-constitution/
Cheers!
Hello all,
Time for a quick update. I finished rigging the bobstays (the three lines running from the stem to the underside of the bowsprit) and the bowsprit shrouds (pair of lines running from the bowsprit to either side of the bow near the rear of the trailboards).
wx_camera_1589682087754 by Jose Gonzales, on Flickr
I served the shrouds along their entire length using the contraption I made. Next on the agenda-the fore-tack boomkins (or bumkins, or even bumpkins, depending on who you ask). Revell provids some very strange slightly s-shaped beams that are rectangular in cross-section. I read somewhere that boomkins did not become rectangular until the 1830’s or 1840’s, and that the Constitution’s boomkins were round spars during the War of 1812, so I determined to fashion my own. I took a small-diameter dowel from the BlueJacket kit, cut two pieces to the same length as the revell pieces, chucked them into my power drill, and used 600 grit sandpaper and needle files to grind down one side of the dowels to a slight taper. I used 0.010x0.040 styrene strip and wrapped it around near the tapered end of the dowels to simulate an iron ring, secured with CA, and drilled 3 holes through the ring to accept 3 eyebolts.
20200517_164110 by Jose Gonzales, on Flickr
20200517_164246 by Jose Gonzales, on Flickr
I’ve painted them black and will mount and rig them shortly.
I’ve also primed the ships boats, along with the three fighting tops. I’m debating whether or not to mount the swivel guns that come with the BlueJacket kit.
wx_camera_1589685971812 by Jose Gonzales, on Flickr
Finally, the red tide here in San Diego is waning now, but I got a chance to take a couple of pictures with my less than ideal cellphone camera:
_DSD7468_edited-1 by Jose Gonzales, on Flickr
_DSD7465_edited-1 by Jose Gonzales, on Flickr
This is probably a question for the painting discussion, but I am not an expert on airbrushing. I just started using my new airbrush which I received from my son for Christmas. It’s a neo by Iwata, and it’s the nicest airbrush I’ve ever worked with.
I finished priming and painting the ships tops and boats. In both, I found that after a full day of drying, the painted items still seemed tacky to the touch. I was wondering if I overdiluted or underdiluted the paints with paint thinner. Do I just need to let them dry longer?
Thanks,
Jose
this is a pic of the barque Star of India in drydock for a hull cleaning. I suppose a technically accurate diorama of a ship would at least hint at the type of marine growth seen here.
Jose, that’s hard to answer without more info.
What paint are you using?
What thinner?
What ratio?
What’s the weather?
Bill
Hello all,
Shortly after my last post, I lost both my parents in a span of 6 days. They had both lived long lives, and I am grateful for all they gave me. After a 2 year hiatus, I have resumed my build. I’m starting small with the ship’s boats, using Marquardt as the main source.
20221011_001556 by Jose Gonzales, on Flickr
Welcome back, Jose.
I’m very sorry to hear about your parents. That’s one of those life milestones.
Bill
Here is the finished boat:
20221218_214115 by Jose Gonzales, on Flickr
I had glued the bowsprit cap/double dolphinback striker assembly to the end of the bowsprit, when, guess what? I hit one of the strikers and broke it. It has happened to every model of Constitution I’ve built, multiple times each. Luckily I had ordered an extra one for my previous builds, but I thought to myself, wouldn’t a wooden assembly be less likely to break? Besides, that wishbone-shaped pair of strikers always looked wierd to me.
20221218_214029 by Jose Gonzales, on Flickr
I cut and filed off the remnants of the broken striker and fashioned a pair from basswood dowels out of the BlueJacket kit, then drilled holes and CA’ed them onto the plastic CAP. Based on how easy it was to drill through the wood I’m worried that basswood will be too soft, so I may look in the LHS for more robust wood dowels.
Boat looks great.
As for the dolphin striker, I also rebuilt the whole thing out of wood since the angle on the Revell is wrong. It is also missing a few tie points as well. I used hardwood strips for the stikers, as I was very worried about snapping them. I also beefed them up a bit by adding an additional tapered piece on the back side above the holes for rigging, as well as a small stretcher bar between the strikers about 1/4 of the way down as it is shown in the AOTS book. When finished and painted, it looks so much better then the plastic one. BTW mine also had a deep molding depression in the upper portion, which would have stood out, even if I filled it. Wood is very forgiving. I probably won’t build another plastic sailing ship again. Maybe just use the hull and fabricate everything else out of wood.
Bob