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PostPosted: Thu Jan 22, 2015 3:13 pm 
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Thanks, Jim. Your praise is much appreciated … trying to live up to it :big_grin:

*************

Engine-room skylight

The frame of the engine room skylight consists of a an etched brass part, folded up and soldered together. On the inside, grooves have been etched that will serve to locate the protective bars to made from thin copper wire. The lower frame was constructed from Pertinax. The ‘wooden’ gratings on both sides of the lower frame are again etched parts.

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Unglazed framework for the engine-room skylight

Once this structure was complete, a square block of the size of the footprint of the skylight was milled from a piece of Plexiglas.

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Squaring up a Plexiglas block for the skylight

In the next step the roof-shaped faces were milled on. To this end, a small insert vice was set to the appropriate angle of 40° in a larger vice bolted to the mill table. The fixed jaw of the insert vice pointed upward and the side of the block to be milled rested against it. This ensured that all four inclined faces would have the same angle and would start from the same height with respect to the reference (bottom) face of the block.

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Milling the sloping faces

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Polishing the sloping faces

A very smooth surface with little tool marks can be achieved on Plexiglas. The final polishing of the surfaces was done using CRATEX-type drum polishers followed by a felt drum loaded with polishing paste. All in the same vice setting to ensure a flat surface. I was lucky the Plexiglas 'house' fitted like a plug into the skylight frame.

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Finished Plexiglas 'glazing' block

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Glazed engine room skylight

To be continued ...

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 22, 2015 6:16 pm 
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wefalck

Stunning workmanship. Beautifully engineered.

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 01, 2015 10:39 am 
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Thanks indeed :big_grin:

************

The 30.5 cm Rk/l22 gun

The main armament of the WESPE-Class was a massive 30.5 cm (12”) Krupp breech-loading rifled gun (Ringkanone, abbrev. Rk). This caliber stayed the bigges in the German Imperial Navy for many decades and well into the Dreadnought-era. It is this gun that essentailly made the boats in floating batteries, rather than ‘real’ ships.

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Large-scale instruction model for the 30,5 Rk on-board the Danish HELGOLAND in the Orlogmuseet, Copenhagen

The guns and their carriage suitably impressed the naval circles of the time, so that it is quite well documented in the German and foreign literature of the time. Krupp was also able to sell this gun (just over ten years after the German-Danish war of 1864!) to the Danish Royal Navy for use in the HELGOLAND. A large-scale instruction model survives in the Orlogmuseet in Copenhagen, which shows many relevant details, even though the carriage was adapted for use in an eclosed turret, rather than the open barbette of the WESPE-Class.

http://www.dreadnoughtproject.org/plans/SM_Wespe_1894//305mm_laffete_100dpi.jpg
Original drawing of the mounting for the 30,5 Rkhttp://www.dreadnoughtproject.org)

A few years ago a detailed dtawing of gun-mount originating in the adminralty archives in Berlin surfaced on the site ‘http://www.dreadnoughtproject.org’. The arrangements for all the heavy Krupp guns of the time were similar, so that a visit to the Finnish fortress Suomenlinna (http://www.maritima-et-mechanika.org/maritime/models/wespe/suomenlinna/suomenlinna.html) off Helsinki was helpful; here a number of Russian clones of 28 cm coastal Krupp guns are still in place since the time, when Finnland was part of the Russian Empire.

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28 cm Krupp-clone coastal guns in the Suomenlinna-fortress off Helsinki

Rails for the Lower Carriage

The lower carriage of the gun is supported on four races that run on semicirucular cast-iron rails bolted to the deck inside the barbette.
These rails need to go into their place in the barbette early during the construction. The same applies to the semi-circular toothed rack that is part of the gun-training machinery. I decided to make the rails from steel, even though ferrous metals in model construction are frowned upon by many. My justifications were that it is difficult to represent cast iron or steel by paint and that there hundreds of models in museums around the world that contain iron. I have used steel in models some twenty years ago and presumably due to the lacquering they shows no signs of rust.

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Roughing out the rails from a metal disc with the backing of a wooden disc

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Grooving the rails with a specially ground bit

Cutting thin disks from round stock of large diameter is a pain I wanted to avoid. Against my better knowledge I picked a suitably sized steel washer as starting material. Unfortunately, the steel used did not machine very well and lot effort was spent to avoid chatter marks while turning and to obtain a reasonably good finish. The various types of wheel collets and chucks available for the watchmaking lathe came into good use for working on inside and outside diameters of these discs. The rails were shaped using a specially ground forming tool.

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Cutting out the inside of the large ring for the tail-races of the lower carriage, while holding it in a so-called bezel-chuck

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Trimming the outside of the smaller forward ring holding the material in a so-called wheel-chuck

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The rails laid out in the barbette

To be continued ...

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 01, 2015 11:35 am 
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and this is where your superlative craftsmanship and mastery of machine tools shines through

just excellent!

love the barbette rails !!


Jim Baumann :thumbs_up_1:

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PostPosted: Thu Feb 05, 2015 3:17 am 
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Thanks, Jim, my hands are not as dexterous and steady as those of certain other people here on the Forum, so I have to resort to machines :big_grin:

***************

Rack-and-pinion drive for training the gun

The gun was trained by pinion acting on a circular rack. The pinion was driven from under deck by a sets of gears and a couple of cranks manned by a number of sailors. The chief gunner was able to connect and disconnect the drive with levers from his aiming-stand behind the gun.
I set up my hand-shaper (http://www.wefalck.eu/mm/tools/shaper/shapers.html) for cutting the rack teeth, but had to throw away the first two attempts because of the poor material and because - again against better knowledge - I did not lock the traverse slide when cutting. The table was removed from the shaper and the home-made dividing head bolted on instead. For lack of a proper tool grinder (another project now in hand) I hand-ground a cutter for the rack teeth (0.1 mm at the bottom) from a rod of high-speed steel. For holding this tool-bit in the shaper, an old lantern-style tool holder from the watch lathe came very handy. The unwanted parts of the ring were cut away on the shaper using ordinary left and right hand lathe tools. Finally the necessary sections were trimmed off with a fine saw blade on the lathe's sawing table.

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Hand-shaper set-up for cutting the toothed rack

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Cutting the toothed rack with a specially ground tool

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Cutting away the unwanted part of the ring with an ordinary tool

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Rails and rack provisionally in their place inside the barbette


To be continued ...

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PostPosted: Thu Feb 05, 2015 5:41 am 
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Hello wefalck

What a lovely and creative build! A small lathe like yours
is standing right on top of my iwishicouldafford list.
I'm looking forward to seeing this build progressing.

Sincerely

Chrischan


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PostPosted: Thu Feb 12, 2015 4:38 am 
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Well the machine tools are all antiques and one has to dig quite deep into the pockets these days for something like them, if you can still find them - 10, 15 years ago it seems to have been easier.

*********

The gun barrel and lock

Turning the barrel
Because there will various visible areas of bare metal, the material of the original, that is steel, was chosen. A piece of round bar was faced, centred and rough drilled for the bore. This hole served as a protective counter bore for the tailstock centre during the following turning operations. In order to get a good finish the automatic longitudinal feed for the lathe was set up with the change gears. Unfortunately the minimum feed per revolution on the watchmaking lathe is still too high to get a 'mirror' finish. One day I have to construct some sort of reduction gear. The outer part of the barrel has a slight taper (1 degree included angle) and the top-slide was off-set accordingly for this operation.

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Facing and centring a piece of steel rod for the gun barrel

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Rough drilling of the gun barrel

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Turning the barrel using the automatic fine feed

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Taper-turning with slide rest off-set

For rounding off the ends of the rings the lathe’s hand tool rest came to good use. The work was finished off with fine wet-and-dry paper (remember to cover ways!) and steel wool. The bore was bored to diameter using the slide-rest and a micro-boring tool. I had originally envisaged to also show the rifling, but a quick calculation told me that for a 1 mm bore and 72 rifled fields I would need a tool edge tha is just over 0.04 mm wide ...

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Rounding the 'rings' using a hand turning rest

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Boring the barrel using a micro boring tool

To be continued ...

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 18, 2015 10:54 am 
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Milling the trunnion seats and the lock
For drilling holes for the trunnions and milling the seat of the lock the diving head was set up on the slide-rest. I could have done this operation on the milling machine, but on the lathe the dividing head (http://www.maritima-et-mechanika.org/tools/dividinghead/dividinghead.html) is centred automatically. The outer end of the barrel was supported by the arm with an appropriate centre fitted. The resulting shape from the milling operation looks like a keyhole, but something like a mushroom shape with sharp edges is required. This was achieved by hand filing.

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Set-up showing for milling the seat for the lock

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Close-up of the milling operation in the dividing head with support

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Working drawing and files used to finish the lock seat

For the next operation the set-up had to be transferred to the mill anyway: milling the seats for the square trunnions. The trunnions merge in a concave curve with the barrel. The trunnions were turned up on the lathe as disk with two round stubs protruding from either end. In the dividing head on the mill the disk was milled square to the size of the seat (or rather the other way round). These parts then were soft-soldered to the barrel. Back on the mill the concave curves of the square part of the trunnion were milled using a miniature ball-head cutter, rotating the barrel in the dividing head.

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Milling the square part of the trunnions

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Milling the seat for the trunnions

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Trying the trunnion

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Milling the concave transition between trunnion and barrel


Aiming a gun in these days was a rather primitive affair, using just simple sights. The sights (two of them on either side of the barrel) consisted essentially of a round bar with a sliding rod to give the elevation. The beads (mounted near the trunnions) were observed through a ring of inverted U-shape on top of the rod. The bar was screwed into a notch in the barrel. Now, drilling into a round at a tangent is nearly impossible without deflection and breaking the drill (0.3 mm!). Therefore, I ground flat a broken drill bit to make a make-shift micro-mill and sunk a start hole. This was finished with an ordinary drill.

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Milling the seat for the sights

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Drilling the seats for the sights

To be continued ...

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 18, 2015 11:19 am 
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Wefalck

Quite stunning.

I think I have probably made this comment already but I will make it again. I thought I was getting pretty good a building ship models but after seeing the quality of this build I think I might just give up and take up knitting instead!

Looking forward to the next instalment.

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PostPosted: Sat Feb 28, 2015 2:46 pm 
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:oops: … I would rather see continue with boats - unless you were knitting some torpedo-nets for instance :big_grin:

****************

Lock for the 30,5 cm gun

The next thing to be tackled was the lock piece or ‘wedge’. This 'wedge' has a rather complex shape with a flat front, but a round back and various recesses and cut-outs. I decided it would be best to undertake most of the machining operations while it is still attached to some (round) material that can be easily held in a collet. The round back was milled in an upright collet holder (http://www.maritima-et-mechanika.org/tools/attachments/attachments.html) on my mill's rotary table after the various coaxial holes had been drilled and the flat sides milled, all in the same set-up. For machining the other recesses the piece had to transferred to the diving head on the mill.

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Round-milling the lock piece in an upright collet-holder on the rotary table

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Cutting off the finished lock piece

The most time consuming part turned out to be the cover piece for the lock, which in the prototype was fastened by five hexagonal head bolts. It holds the moving and locking screws in their place. It took me four tries before I produced a half-way satisfactory piece. Soldering the microscopic bolts (0.4 mm head diameter) in place got me quite a few grey hairs. Finally a fake locking screw was turned up and the moving screw, which moves the lock in and out, was faked from a couple of drilled-together 0.1 mm copper wires, covered in a thin layer of solder to make them look like steel.

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Milling square and hexagonal bolts

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Facing the locking screw in special protective brass collet

The large re-enforcement ring for the barrel was also turned up and two holes drilled into it for seating the rack quadrant that forms part of the elevating gear. In fact, I had cheated a bit, when drilling/milling the lock seat: the front of the hole should have been flat, which is difficult to machine; so I continued the elongated hole under the re-enforcement ring, which was made as a separate part and slipped over the barrel.
The various parts of the lock were assembled using lacquer and cyanoacrylate glue.

Image

Image

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The (almost) finished gun barrel with its lock (toothpick for scale)

To be continued ...

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Former chairman Arbeitskreis historischer Schiffbau e.V. (German Association for Shipbuilding History)

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Last edited by wefalck on Sat Mar 13, 2021 3:32 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Sat Feb 28, 2015 7:00 pm 
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This is absolutely beautiful work. Truly impressive.

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PostPosted: Sat Feb 28, 2015 8:21 pm 
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You think this is amazing, then you see the toothpick and you are BLOWN AWAY.
Well done.

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PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2015 7:54 pm 
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I must ask,.. were you ever a watchmaker or repair of such? Your machining skills are truly impressive.

Mick


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PostPosted: Thu Mar 05, 2015 3:08 pm 
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Thanks, gentlemen. Actually, I am an entirely self-taught 'mechanic'. Over the years the restauration of the watchmaking machines became a hobby in itself and I developed the skill accordingly. I gather the main ingredient is patience ….

*************

The upper gun carriage

Based on the profile drawings from (http://www.dreadnoughtproject.org) and the available contemporary photographs templates for photo-etched parts for the upper carriage were developed. The original carriage cheeks are made up from cast(?) frames that are covered in rivetted-on plates of sheet metal. The two cheeks are tied together by bracing pieces with rivetted re-enforcements. The cheeks and braces are reproduced as surface-etched parts.

http://www.dreadnoughtproject.org/plans/SM_Wespe_1894//305mm_laffete_100dpi.jpg
Original drawing of the mount for the 30,5 cm gunhttp://www.dreadnoughtproject.org)

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Part view of the drawings for the photo-etched upper carriage cheeks

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Surface etched cheeks for the upper carriage

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Filler and covering pieces laid out for soldering

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Assembled cheeks and ties laid out

A core for the cheeks was sawn from 0.8 mm brass sheet and the etched covers soldered on. Then 'rivetted angle-irons', from etched parts were soldered on. These are connected by tie-plates. The frame of the upper carriage is also strengthend by horizontal ties. These are composites from several etched parts in order to show the rivetting. The horizontal ties were soldered to the side pieces, while the bulkhead-like ties were glued in because it would have been to difficult and risky to bring the heat for soldering at the right places. The covers for the trunnion-bearings were bent from an etched part and soldered together.

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Assembled upper gun carriage from the rear

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Assembled upper gun carriage from the front

The upper carriage was further kitted-out with wheels. The front and rear rollers were turned from steel to give them a real 'steel' appearance. On the prototype the rear rollers sit in excentric bearings that allows them to be brought into to contact with the rails on the lower carriage: when being fired the upper carriage slides back on these rails, the rollers allow it to roll back into the firing position.

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Carriage with the barrel in place. Note the trunnion bearings cover (not yet trimmed to length)

Image

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Added the rollers plus the sockets aft for the lever that is used to turn the excentric bearings of the rear rollers

To be continued ...

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Former chairman Arbeitskreis historischer Schiffbau e.V. (German Association for Shipbuilding History)

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PostPosted: Thu Mar 05, 2015 3:57 pm 
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beautiful photoetch work

it looks ..." heavy "
quite a feat for a small thing eh!"


JIM B

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PostPosted: Sun Jan 01, 2017 2:40 pm 
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I hope everyone made it safely into 2017. Now that various toolmaking and machine-building projects (http://www.maritima-et-mechanika.org/tools/diefiler/diefiler.html, http://www.maritima-et-mechanika.org/tools/micromill/micromill.html, http://www.maritima-et-mechanika.org/tools/handsander/handsander.html) have been completed I am returning to SMS WESPE after a long break.
First I had a look at the box with the parts already made to aid my memory a bit:

Image

Also, the building-log proper is a great aid in recapitulating what has been done already. I hope to be able to soon report here on real progress ...

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Last edited by wefalck on Tue Jan 10, 2017 4:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 02, 2017 1:59 pm 
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..


Last edited by carr on Wed Jul 18, 2018 10:15 am, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Tue Jan 03, 2017 5:02 pm 
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Thanks, Gentlemen, for the encouraging words.

************************************************

I am now catching up from the point, where the log had been interrupted. The work below was actually undertaken quite a while ago.

The gears were cut from brass stock in the milling machine with the help of direct dividing head and different division plates. The shape of the teeth is not exactly correct, because I used a disc-shaped burr as cutting tool. However, at this module (0.06), where the teeths are merely pitched 0.1 mm apart, this is hardly noticeable. The gear wheels are parted off from the stock on the lathe. The gear segment that will be attached to the barrel was produced in the same manner.

Image

Image

Image

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Cutting the gears for the gun elevating mechanism using different division plates

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Cut-off wheels before further machining

to be continued ...

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Former chairman Arbeitskreis historischer Schiffbau e.V. (German Association for Shipbuilding History)

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 04, 2017 5:07 pm 
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To get away a bit (sort of) from all that intricate micro-machining and to see something grow, I turned my attention to the skylight above the officers' quarter in the back of the boat.

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Skylight above the above officers’ mess (Laverrenz)

It was, as other skylights, constructed again around a little block of Plexiglas™ that was milled to shape.

Image

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Milling to shape a small Plexiglas block

The panelling was constructed from various layers of 0.4 mm thick Pertinax. For sanding the edges square the then newly constructed micro-grinding machine came handy.

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Grinding square edges on the micro-grinding machine

On the prototype the upper part of the skylight could be lifted off and the coamings of the hatch had half-round trimmings around. For this something half-round of 0.4 mm diameter was required. Short length of half-round wire was produced from lengths of 0.4 mm diameter copper wire that were stuck onto a piece of aluminium that was milled flat in situ to ensure an even thickness of the half-rounds.

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Milling half-round profiles from 0.4 mm copper-wire

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Grinding 45° bevels onto half-round 0.4 mm copper-wire

I am not absolutely happy with the result, but one has to consider that the skylight has a footprint of only 7 mm by 8 mm. Perhaps I should have another try with shop-made photo-etched parts to be designed for the purpose.

Image
The skylight before painting


To be continued ...

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PostPosted: Tue Jan 10, 2017 4:06 pm 
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I then turned my attention back to the hull and its superstructures. All surfaces that would have been iron plating, will be covered in thin sheets of Pertinax. The necessary holes for portholes and other opening will be drilled or cut before the sheets are fixed. In this way the barbette was lined with sheets of Pertinax as was the deck-house.

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Deck-house covered in a thin sheet of Pertinax

The decks on the prototype were iron plate and this plating was covered in oil-paint that was mixed with sand and cement in order to provide a certain corrosion resistance and above all a better grip in wet conditions. A modelling plan drawn by Wolfgang Bohlayer shows wood on some decks, but evidence that since has become available shows that this was not the case. Also, linoleum decking apparently was never used on these boats.

Image

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Engraving plate-lines and planking seams

As the model will show the boat in its original appearence, the plating was reproduced by engraving fine lines into thin sheets of Pertinax. All decks, including that of the barbette will covered in this way. The exception is the deck above the foc'sle that has a cover of planks, presumably to reduce wear, where the anchors were worked. This planking was laid-out in a radiant pattern, which seems to have been more resistant to the gun-blast than the more common parallel layout. The planks were also reproduced by lightly engraving the plank seams. In reality these seams would have been more or less flush with the deck, depending on the temperature and humidity, but a light engraving adds some life to the appearance.

Image
Engraved rear-deck plating and planking for the foc’sl

to be continued ...

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