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PostPosted: Mon Jan 04, 2021 6:01 am 
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PostPosted: Mon Jan 04, 2021 11:11 am 
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Hi EJ,

That's really a very good idea! Hope it will be possible to have all these types on photo AND a general plan of each. I will look into my store what I can contribute.

Maarten

_________________
"I've heard there's a wicked war a-blazing, and the taste of war I know so very well
Even now I see the foreign flag a-raising, their guns on fire as we sail into hell"
Roger Whittaker +9/13/2023


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PostPosted: Mon Jan 04, 2021 2:46 pm 
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Hi Evert Jan

Really good idea, thank you, and thank you Mr Schönfeld, I'll take a look in my bits of papers to see if there's something that may be of use.

Best wishes
Cag.


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 08, 2021 3:39 pm 
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EJF,

A most useful thread. I will be sending you a PM with some suggestions in due course.


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PostPosted: Sat Jan 09, 2021 10:38 am 
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PostPosted: Sat Jan 09, 2021 2:03 pm 
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EJF,

In advance of my intended PM and for those interested.

The Admiralty Manual of Seamanship Vol 1 (1937) has a table listing the particulars of fittings etc for steam and motor boats between pages 284 and 285. There are no drawings in the book. This seems to lay down details of most of the boats that will be the subject of your thread. However, it does not give details of the service's pulling boats.

The collection of Norman Ough's boat drawings including his other work, are held by Bristol University as part of the SS GREAT BRITAIN Trust, which I presume owns the copyright. The drawings of Ough origin are, with those of other draftsmen, part of the David McGregor collection. These have been catalogued (it is a big list) and details can be found on-line (apologies to all, I don't have details of the link). Images are available for purchase on a CD.

Concerning the images in your last post: the 45ft motor launch shown is of the "light" type which came into service circa 1935. It replaced the 45ft motor launch with auxiliary motor that had been in service for some years previously but was still being carried by the "Revenge" class battleships. The latter boat is that illustrated in your blog embarking Royal Marines. Please do not delete that as it serves to illustrate the earlier boat of which there are few good images and from what past research revealed to me, NO drawings available in the National Maritime Museum (NMM). It is known, however that the NMM does have a copy of the drawing of the later boat.

The above will answer your immediate, implied, queries, other details will follow.


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PostPosted: Sun Jan 10, 2021 4:11 pm 
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PostPosted: Mon Jan 11, 2021 2:20 pm 
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Hi All,

Hi 81542, hi Evert Jan, yes also found the Admiralty Seamanship manual info, Im sure I had some Ough drawings in a ship drawings book, 27ft whaler, 32ft cutter etc still looking.

Will send anything I find

Best wishes
Cag.


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PostPosted: Mon Jan 11, 2021 2:36 pm 
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If it is any help, Norman Ough's service boat drawings were published at reduced size in Model Boats magazine around the 1970s and are also to be found in "The life and ship models of Norman Ough" by Alastair Roach published in 2016 by Seaforth.


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PostPosted: Mon Jan 11, 2021 3:52 pm 
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Thank you Cag and FrancisMcN. The book mentioned by Francis is a very useful reference for British warship fittings drawings circa 1939 - 45 and enlightening on a very interesting model-maker.

What follows might be of additional interest to enhancing the accuracy of EJ Foeth's thread though I will have to put it in more than one post.

One NJB Stapleton wrote a most useful book about steam picket boats that can be obtained via the second hand book market. It deserves to be mentioned in the blog.

A number of years ago I completed a model of a "Revenge" class battleship as she appeared at the outbreak of WW2. Final completion was delay by the necessity to research and obtain information about three of the boats that the ship was carrying at the time. I was able to complete a passable model of the 45ft launch with auxiliary engine from some photographs and a model of the boat onboard that of HMS NELSON in the Newcastle Discovery Museum. There were no drawings of the boat in the National Maritime Museum: I checked the holdings in the Brass Foundry (BF). The other two boats; the 45ft Motor Picket Boat and the admiral's barge were only identified from a large midships photograph of my ship in the Richard Perkins collection and one in the autobiography "The Battle and the Breeze" by Admiral Ashmore and using these I was able to trawl the Vosper Thorneycroft (VT) and British Power Boats (BPB) collections. I found the drawings for those two boats there and was able to construct drawings for the required models from those. Anyone getting excited about that information, however, should be aware that neither the VT nor the BPB collections had been catalogued at that date. Therefore any model-maker looking to try and find originals of plans that they need will require a photograph of their quarry and the time and patience to trawl the collections in the BF if what they need cannot be found elsewhere.

I would now like to comment on the content of the blog. First the 25ft Motor Cutter or Motor Boat as it was also known. The drawing shows the boat as designed. It remained in service until the 1980's largely unmodified except for the steering and engine control arrangements (effected in the early 1960's) and in some cases the fitting of GRP canopies.

Next what is described as the Type 1 35ft Fast Motor Boat. The first two pictures appear to be of a longer boat as does number six in the sequence. Images 4 and 5 however, are of a 35ft type that was built by BPB and the drawings are in the collection: they were the ones that I used to model the admiral's barge that I made. What is of interest from a recognition point though is that all of the images show a type of wheel house that I consider indicative of a BPB design boat though I would advise caution on this point.

(To be Continued)


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 12, 2021 10:56 am 
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(Continuing)

35ft Aircraft Tender. I don't think that these boats were in the Admiralty establishment. They were probably intended for the RAF so their presence here is dubious. That said, aircraft carriers may have had one.

45ft Diesel Picket Boat. I take in the web address but technically speaking the term "Green Parrot" would be applied to any barge so long as it was that of the Commander-in-Chief of a fleet. The "Green Parrot" in Portsmouth may still be used by whatever Commander-in-Chief there is in the area but is more likely to be a heritage artifact: I stand corrected though.

16ft Fast Motor Dinghy: Colloquially known as the "Skimmer" as well as "Skimming Dish." May be encountered with a fixed coxswain's wind shield. Went out of service in the early 1960's.

27ft Whaler. "Montague" refers to the sailing rig not, at the time, the boat. The term "Montague" came into use in the 1960's/70's; probably to permit differentiation between it and the motor or "3 in 1" whaler which entered service in the late 1950's. Interestingly though, the picture in EJF's Blog shows a boat being steered with the arrangement normally used for sailing. Otherwise they were usually steered with a bar type tiller. The boat also appears to being pulled with two men on some of the oars: there was normally only one on each. I can only think that the arrangement shown was ordered so as to ease working the boat with the weight of the practice torpedo being recovered.

Unknown. Appears from an enlargement of the steering wheel, to be a "light" type 45ft Motor Launch. It is being used as a diving tender.

Steam "Thingy." All are of a 50ft Steam Pinnace or Picket Boat. Some were fitted with motors.

14ft Sailing Dinghy. The link with the web address would seem to indicate that this boat was not the one used during WW2 but the one later introduce as a recreational sailing dinghy during the 1950's. It was colloquially referred to as a "14ft RNSA" the acronym meaning Royal Navy Sailing Association.

I will try to help with other queries that may arise but it is possible that while boat lengths may have been fairly "standard," changes may have been made to the superstructures on orders from above in order to cope with shortages in materials or comments from sea. I certainly get that feeling from the images on the blog.


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 12, 2021 12:04 pm 
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PostPosted: Tue Jan 12, 2021 2:25 pm 
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EJF,

Re: NMM's Box drawings. I recall going through these many years ago in an attempt to find a drawing of what I must refer to as the "heavy" 45ft Motor Launch. I found only a drawing of the boat that had been modified for a specific duty in Bermuda, I believe it was. It proved of little value. There was, of course, one for the 45ft "light" type.

Re: The photograph of HMS NELSON on Pge 271 of R and R. I presume that you are referring to the boat on the port side. My assessment is that it is "probably" a 35ft Fast Motor Boat of British Power Boats origin: it has that type of wheelhouse and thus having the duty of an admiral's barge.

All other points are noted but I need to work out how to send you a photograph of two drawings that I made.


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PostPosted: Wed Jan 13, 2021 7:05 am 
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PostPosted: Wed Jan 13, 2021 9:19 am 
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EJF,

I don't know where you found that last image but it is of considerable interest to me especially the 45ft (?) motor launch! The model that I mentioned in my post of 9.52pm of 11 Jan was of HMS RESOLUTION. I established exactly what RESOLUTION was carrying in August 1939. Amongst those she had a "heavy" type 45ft motor launch onboard at the time and I drew a plan for a model of it based on what I could find at the time. However, I later found an image of a picture from a private collection taken onboard the ship after the Philadelphia repair/refit on a web-site run by one Richard Baker which showed a launch which did not tie in with what I knew of the boat in 1939. I assumed (dangerous habit) therefore that the boat onboard circa 1942 was of American origin and left things there as the timing was outside my period of "interest."

The launch in your image may therefore be of American origin and possibly longer than 45ft, or a British "heavy" type 45ft motor launch with a considerably different steering arrangement from the normal one. However, apart from that your image shows a 50ft steam pinnace and the forward part of a 32ft cutter.


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PostPosted: Wed Jan 13, 2021 9:35 am 
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PostPosted: Wed Jan 13, 2021 11:07 am 
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Well done EJF!,

The image in your last post shows a boat that has been somewhat "tidied up" internally compared to HMS RESOLUTION's version but on the balance of probabilities I'd say that it was the type that she must have received in Philly.

For your further information, I trawled for Richard Baker's web-site on RESOLUTION later. It has been up-dated (2017) since I corresponded with him whilst I was completing my model and the image that I mentioned is no longer shown: a pity. Contacting him may help you if you wish to take the matter further.


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PostPosted: Thu Jan 14, 2021 7:28 am 
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PostPosted: Thu Jan 14, 2021 9:15 am 
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Hi All

Hi EJ, still going through books and files, will send through what might be of use to you, can only find Ough's book of warship drawings, County, QE class, pre war and late war destroyers etc.

Ships boats in there but rather small!

Best wishes
Cag.


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 15, 2021 5:14 am 
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