Many thanks everyone!
Thanks Pascal! Very interesting to see the French take on it, and with some 3D visualisations.
Interesting how as the main conclusions is put: '
the battle didn't have much immediate consequences. Napoleon remained victorious on the continent. The premier empire would exist for another 10 years.'
Not incorrect of course, but quite different from the analysis in British publications...
Well, that's history...

In my diorama, I like to show some duality: a battle that turns out very victorious for the British, but where the French and Spanish fight very courageously too, with Redoutable's crew almost succeeding in boarding Victory.
Back to the workbench now!
The inside of the bulwarks still needed some details: shot racks, kevels and pin rails. As these can only be installed after painting and installing the decks, at first I was thinking to keep construction of those details for the future.
But now, my new toy made me feel like already doing them anyway!
I started with Victory.
Shot racks are basically narrow strips with regularly spaced half-round depressions. Difficult to do sharply by hand, but easy with a milling machine!
I started of course by drilling rows of holes to the exact same depth. I opted to also mill the sides of the strips. This way, I could make them perfectly parallel to the row of holes, and at a perfect 90° to the top surface.
Here, I am milling two grooves along the row of shallow holes, effectively creating the sides of the strips:

Of course, these grooves need to cut through the entire thickness of the plastic sheet, but I don’t want to cut into the X-Y-table. Therefore, I clamped a 2mm thick ‘sacrificial’ piece of plastic sheet under the 0,5mm thick sheet I am making the shot racks from.
After drilling and milling, it is only a matter of cutting the narrow ends to ‘extract’ the shot racks from the sheet. For the 64lb carronade shot racks, I glued 2 strips together. These have 0,65mm holes; while the others are 0,4mm.

The pin rails started the same way. But of course, the holes need to be drilled all the way through the plastic sheet, and they have a smaller diameter (0,2mm):

But when cutting them from the sheet, I left a ‘handle’ on one side:

This helped a lot for holding the pieces while gluing small pieces of stretched sprue in them. I only cut and rounded the other end at the very end of the process.

The kevels and staghorns were made in the ‘traditional’ way by hand:

And the pieces temporarily tacked in place with tiny blobs of Blu Tack:

