The Ship Model Forum http://www.shipmodels.info/mws_forum/ |
|
Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino http://www.shipmodels.info/mws_forum/viewtopic.php?f=59&t=64144 |
Page 1 of 6 |
Author: | johnd13 [ Mon Nov 29, 2010 3:11 am ] |
Post subject: | Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino |
I'm new here (at least as a member who posts) so let me start by introducing myself. ![]() My name is John, and I am a Software Executive by trade. I have been building model battleships since I was a teenager in the '70s, starting with a 1/720 Massachusetts, then moving on to the Revell Missouri and Arizona, the Lindberg Bismarck and Hood (I was a kid, and they were big and cheap) and eventually culminating in my teen years with the Tamiya 1/350 Yamato. Then came lots of work, wife and kids, and I didn't build another battleship until the 90s - when I built the Tamiya Bismarck and New Jersey in 1/350. These two marked my introduction to working with Etched Brass. Another super-busy career period, a lot of models purchased, stashed and not started. I bought the Academy Graf Spee deluxe edition a few months ago. It came with a wood deck, and metal barrels and I thought, "Wow. How the hobby has changed from the days of the painted tan on my Yamato, and sewing thread rigging." One of the kits in my "purchase and stash pile" was the Eastern Express (before it was acquired by Zvezda) Borodino in 1/350. I bought the White Ensign Brass, and the metal barrels, and searched around for a wood deck - and nobody made one. In fact, I discovered that there are a LOT of kits that don't have wood decks. More on that in a minute. I found a wood deck for the Revell Bismarck on eBay, so I purchased that - along with one for the Yamato - both in 1/350. And I bought the Hasagewa Nagato 1944 in 1/350, and was very impressed with the deck that came with that kit... So I started thinking that I really wanted a wood deck for the Borodino, but I wanted it to be really good. And I wanted better deck options for the other kits that I planned to build. For example, I came to realize that if I combined my Revell Bismarck with my LionRoar Super-Detail Etched Brass, that the wood deck that was cut to fit the factory kit would have holes for all of those fittings that the LionRoar brass kit told me to scrape off and remove! ![]() So then I thought that I needed a wood deck for the Borodino, and one to fit the Super Detail Brass for the Bismarck, and I want to build the Varyag after the Borodino, so I would have to have a matching deck for that... Sorry. I am easily distracted. ![]() This will be the base post on this thread, and I will post replies showing the work as I go. Stay tuned! |
Author: | JCRAY [ Mon Nov 29, 2010 9:54 am ] |
Post subject: | Re: Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino |
Hi John looking foward to your progress reports! |
Author: | JIM BAUMANN [ Mon Nov 29, 2010 1:16 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino |
![]() Certainly an excellent idea-- providing employment for family--create a small bushiness and have ..kind of- fun ! Borodino is a model that needs a careful coat of looking at before launching into... suggest have a look here first- viewtopic.php?f=47&t=12304 ( 35 short(!) pages of ananlysis and PHOTOS) - the minutia is being dissected--but it is very useful in avoiding some of the pitfalls in the starting point kit here is a presentable and handsome model of Borodino built recently by my chum Nick Johnson. He made his own Porthole surrounds and eyebrows of brass wire--the PE items being decorative--but too clunky gallery page link here http://www.modelshipgallery.com/gallery ... index.html ![]() Cheers Jim Baumann ![]() |
Author: | johnd13 [ Mon Nov 29, 2010 2:42 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino |
JIM BAUMANN wrote: :welcome: to modelwarships.com Borodino is a model that needs a careful coat of looking at before launching into... suggest have a look here first- viewtopic.php?f=47&t=12304 ( 35 short(!) pages of ananlysis and PHOTOS) - the minutia is being dissected--but it is very useful in avoiding some of the pitfalls in the starting point kit here is a presentable and handsome model of Borodino built recently by my chum Nick Johnson. He made his own Porthole surrounds and eyebrows of brass wire--the PE items being decorative--but too clunky gallery page link here http://www.modelshipgallery.com/gallery ... index.html Cheers Jim Baumann Jim - Thanks for the welcome. While I am a new poster here, I am certainly not a new reader as I have been lurking for years and dreaming of the time when I would be able to post one of my projects. That dream is now becoming a reality! I have already read through the Borodino thread, and printed out a bunch of the pictures of various builds of the kit to use as references! Thanks again for making me feel welcome here! |
Author: | drdoom1337 [ Mon Nov 29, 2010 3:40 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino |
john, If you're into making some obscure things, or perhaps could help me out on making my own wood deck please get back to me! I want to make a wood deck for my 1/350 NJ to save the time of laying down individual planks. I'm not sure about the CAD work necessary for this. I think there could be a big market for wood decks for USN BB's. All the Trumpeter / Tamiya kits have annoying seams in the decks (lack of a one piece deck is a huge buzz kill) and just about everyone on this board has one. Some people make the complaint that USN BB's in WWII had blue or camo'd decks. Well I can argue that carriers had camo'd decks too and theres wooden decks available for them! ![]() |
Author: | johnd13 [ Mon Nov 29, 2010 4:30 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino |
drdoom1337 wrote: john, If you're into making some obscure things, or perhaps could help me out on making my own wood deck please get back to me! I want to make a wood deck for my 1/350 NJ to save the time of laying down individual planks. I'm not sure about the CAD work necessary for this. I think there could be a big market for wood decks for USN BB's. All the Trumpeter / Tamiya kits have annoying seams in the decks (lack of a one piece deck is a huge buzz kill) and just about everyone on this board has one. Some people make the complaint that USN BB's in WWII had blue or camo'd decks. Well I can argue that carriers had camo'd decks too and theres wooden decks available for them! ![]() Actually, those are in development right now! Here's where we are in terms of what we are working on (all kits 1/350) and their status: Available: Zvezda Borodino Class Battleship (Borodino, Oriol, Knyaz Suvarov) and Varyag Protected Cruiser Final Test Cuts: ICM Konig Battleship, Tamiya I-400 aircraft carrying submarine, Dragon Scharnhorst Battlecruiser Preliminary Drafting Underway: Tamiya Missouri (1945) and New Jersey (1980s) Battleships Next candidates (This is what we have planned, but these are definitely subject to change due to demand): A refit of the Tamiya Missouri/New Jersey to fit the Revell 1/350 kits of those two ships Tamiya KGV and Prince of Wales Revell Bismarck Super-Detail Deck Tamiya Yamato Super-Detail Deck Trumpeter 1/200 Arizona Trumpeter Roma (as soon as it is released) As for the comments about wood decks, take the North Carolina, Alabama, Massachusetts which are all preserved as museum ships - they all have natural wood decks today, so modelers wanting to render those ships as they appear as they visited it would want a wood deck - right? I also have the Trumpeter Alabama and North Carolina on the shelf, but they haven't made their way onto the deck development list yet. |
Author: | ex-navy [ Mon Nov 29, 2010 7:04 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino |
wow... outstanding work,, are you planning on doing this for MASS/Alabama..????? |
Author: | BFR4570 [ Mon Nov 29, 2010 7:15 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino |
I think this is a wonderful idea. The thinness of the material means you do not have to sand down the entire deck enough for the wood planks to keep from being too high on the deck fittings. By the time you have sanded off the raised lines, you have probably sanded off 1/100 of an inch. For the new Arizona from Trumpeter, this would be ideal because 1/100 of an inch is a scale 2 inches at 1/200 scale, which just happens to be how thick the deck planks were. The new Arizona should be easier to design, also. The planks used appear to be 8 inches wide. This scales to 4/100 of an inch. That would be real close to 12 pixels wide, with a 1 pixel line. Have you tried to print at 600 dpi? This might give you more flexibility, and more realistic lines. They should still be visible. It is amazing what the eye can actually pick up. A 1 pixel line at 600 dpi would look more scale than a 300 dpi line. At 1/200 scale that would be a scale 1/3" line vs. a 2/3" line. The caulk between the boards was, I believe, only 3/16" wide. That is only .1875, or half the width of the 600 dpi line. Even if it only gives the impression of a line, that would be even better, as that is what we see in the pictures anyway, isn't it? Except for the closeups, of course. Just an idea. If you have already tried it, that's fine. I just mentioned it in case you hadn't. |
Author: | johnd13 [ Mon Nov 29, 2010 7:36 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino |
To answer recent questions: Yes, we are definitely planning on doing an Alabama (already have the Trumpeter kit to work off of!) and probably a Massachusetts adaptation after that. Right now I am printing a one-pixel line on a our 300dpi laser printer. In case you're wondering, it's not easy to come by an 11x17 laser printer with a straigh paper path that is capable of printing on wood! And, the toner sticks to the wood pretty well, but not perfectly. So we actually get a very slight drop-off of some plank lines, making them almost imperceptible. Overall, the effect is pretty pleasing to the eye - even if it is by accident! The cut lines at the plank ends are really, really tricky. For some reason, if you print those fully we get a much too think line. I don't know why that is, but it is. So what we do is to leave little gaps around the cuts; picture a pattern like |-| where the cuts don't actually form corners where the toner tends to accumulate. So that's a bit tricky, but I think we have some good results there. The trick is to make it "look right" with a "hint of a line" and let the human imagination do the rest. And, for the record, we're using a fairly old printer now (it's what we could afford just to get started.) My dream is to get a nice, 11x17, straight path COLOR laser printer that we can use to print not only deck lines but camouflage patterns, national insignias (think Kriegsmarine swastikas) and other markings (such as aircraft carrier lines and numbers.) But that is all MUCH further down the road after the business starts paying its own way. Great questions and great comments. Thanks, and keep 'em coming! |
Author: | Dan K [ Mon Nov 29, 2010 7:59 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino |
Great work. Maybe you can be persuaded to do a proper wood deck for the 1/350 Shokaku/Zuikaku. THe KA deck planking is twice as wide as it should be. Any plans for 1/700? |
Author: | drdoom1337 [ Mon Nov 29, 2010 8:33 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino |
johnd13 wrote: drdoom1337 wrote: john, If you're into making some obscure things, or perhaps could help me out on making my own wood deck please get back to me! I want to make a wood deck for my 1/350 NJ to save the time of laying down individual planks. I'm not sure about the CAD work necessary for this. I think there could be a big market for wood decks for USN BB's. All the Trumpeter / Tamiya kits have annoying seams in the decks (lack of a one piece deck is a huge buzz kill) and just about everyone on this board has one. Some people make the complaint that USN BB's in WWII had blue or camo'd decks. Well I can argue that carriers had camo'd decks too and theres wooden decks available for them! ![]() Actually, those are in development right now! Here's where we are in terms of what we are working on (all kits 1/350) and their status: Available: Zvezda Borodino Class Battleship (Borodino, Oriol, Knyaz Suvarov) and Varyag Protected Cruiser Final Test Cuts: ICM Konig Battleship, Tamiya I-400 aircraft carrying submarine, Dragon Scharnhorst Battlecruiser Preliminary Drafting Underway: Tamiya Missouri (1945) and New Jersey (1980s) Battleships Next candidates (This is what we have planned, but these are definitely subject to change due to demand): A refit of the Tamiya Missouri/New Jersey to fit the Revell 1/350 kits of those two ships Tamiya KGV and Prince of Wales Revell Bismarck Super-Detail Deck Tamiya Yamato Super-Detail Deck Trumpeter 1/200 Arizona Trumpeter Roma (as soon as it is released) As for the comments about wood decks, take the North Carolina, Alabama, Massachusetts which are all preserved as museum ships - they all have natural wood decks today, so modelers wanting to render those ships as they appear as they visited it would want a wood deck - right? I also have the Trumpeter Alabama and North Carolina on the shelf, but they haven't made their way onto the deck development list yet. Now that you've given me this news, I don't even want to touch my New Jersey! Or at least glue anything down. |
Author: | johnd13 [ Mon Nov 29, 2010 8:34 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino |
Dan K wrote: Great work. Maybe you can be persuaded to do a proper wood deck for the 1/350 Shokaku/Zuikaku. THe KA deck planking is twice as wide as it should be. Any plans for 1/700? I am a battleship guy first and foremost, but I'm sure we'll do cruisers and carriers too. I have the Trumpeter CV-2 Lexington, but that's my only carrier right now. I'm sure we'll get there, I just don't know how soon. As for other scales, my son and I are intrigued by all of the 1/400 Heller kits; they certainly have a nice selection of European WW2 warships. We might do some dabbling in there. When it comes to 1/700, there are two problems. First is that there are a whole lot of ships out there in 1/700, so to do a deck for each of them - even "the most popular 50%" could keep us busy for years. Don't get me wrong - busy is good! But the second problem is the price. Doing all the design work has to be spread over a certain number of sales at a certain price to be even worth the effort of doing it. We could probably do any ship in a one-off deck for say $500 or so. I don't know how many 1/700 decks we could sell for each ship. And where would we price them? Would somebody pay $30 to $50 for a wood deck for a model ship that cost less than the price of the deck? I guess people sometimes pay more for brass than kits, but adding in decks and barrels... I just don't know. That's the long answer. The short answer is, "if there is a market for it, we have no problem making 1/700 wood decks for kits." The real question is, "does a market exist?" As for plans, they are far down the road at this point; I'm not saying that we won't go there, it's just that we're not likely to go there anytime soon as we have so much that we want to do in 1/350 and 1/400 at this point. |
Author: | johnd13 [ Mon Nov 29, 2010 9:51 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino |
I posted about a wood deck on a 1/200 Arizona forum where the modeler was asking about how to best paint the deck. I don't want to take over his thread with discussions about wood decks, and not about the Arizona at all, so I will answer the questions from that thread here - so that we can keep this discussion about wood decks. And I, as the thread originator, don't mind if we talk about more than the Borodino! ![]() Quote: I had no idea you could work with material that thin. That's worth exploring and you have peaked my interest. Do you have a web site you can point me to? Thanks Dave Actually, Dave, it has been a bit of an experience to work with the thin stuff. It has to be that thin to go through the printer - but of course the real benefit for the hobbyist is that it can just be laid down on top of the existing plastic deck. As for the website, I have reserved the domain name ScaleDecks.com, but I don't have the website built yet - there is nothing there. That should be my Christmas project, with a formal launch at the start of 2011. In the mean time I am just selling the first production units on eBay. Quote: Just beware that you're not repeating what other companies have already done - companies such as KA Models in Korea and Shinsengumi in Japan and VectorCut (who have already done the Varyag, for example). Timmy - We don't want to enter a market by competing with established players, that's for sure. We try to offer is some differentiation, though, when we go head-to-head. VectorCut is a good example. I checked out their deck, and it is a thick sheet of wood that replaces the plastic deck entirely. You then have to scratch build the deck detail (hatches, metal plates, etc) onto their thick deck. Our approach is to use a super-thin sheet that glues on TOP of the existing deck, with the desired detail poking through. A very different approach. We are also looking to offer "super-detail" decks, designed to work with high-detail etched brass, that cover up all the things that you would cut off. Take molded-in stairs - you cut those off and replace those with brass staircases - right? But if you buy a factory-fit deck, then you have a block missing where the clunky staircases used to be. We will offer decks that assume all that stuff has been cut away, then you have a smooth, clean, wall-to-wall deck to work from. Quote: This is very interesting, do you have a website where we can see other items? John - We'll launch ScaleDecks.com in 2011. There is nothing there yet, but the domain name is reserved. We are also considering pointing the hobbyist to decks that other people make that we don't, so that if you are looking for ANY Scale Deck then we can either offer you one of ours or point you to somebody else. Quote: Perhaps they could produce the same items for a more attractive price, which is, for now, the main fault of wooden decks We are trying to be really reasonable here. The decks for the 1/350 Borodino start at under forty dollars retail for the maple, but I am offering them at a discount below that on eBay. Larger ships, like the 1/350 Scharnhorst which features 35 separate pieces will list for $79 - and I plan to offer discounts below that price on eBay. I don't think that's too bad for a kit that lists for $170 or so. If you think the prices are too high, let me know. We're still trying to settle on our final pricing structure. As for me, I think this way. My time is worth "X" dollars per hour. If I can get a wood deck that will save HOURS of painting different shades to simulate wood, and hours messing with masking the borders between wood and metal to get a crisp border line, then it's worth quite a few bucks in time savings alone. It doesn't take too many hours - even at minimum wage - to pay for the savings in time. And the results look better, too! (That's a bonus! ![]() Quote: Very much interested in Borodino as well as other kits like Revell Bismarck Please send us the details on where to buy. As for right now, check out eBay - and look for our website launch in 2011. I have a big ol' Revell Bismarck sitting on the shelf and a LionRoar brass to go with it. I expect that and the Tamiya Yamato will be our first forays into the "super detail decks" - although I hear that LionRoar is coming out with a super-detail set for the Tamiya Missouri. It would probably be pretty easy to alter our existing "stock" Missouri deck to produce a high-detail variant. That one might sneak ahead of the other two... ![]() |
Author: | Tracy White [ Tue Nov 30, 2010 12:42 am ] |
Post subject: | Re: Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino |
Not trying to rain on your parade; the technique looks like it shows promise, but when I see your tests, I still see 1/1 wood grain, and that kills it for me. |
Author: | johnd13 [ Tue Nov 30, 2010 1:00 am ] |
Post subject: | Re: Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino |
Tracy White wrote: Not trying to rain on your parade; the technique looks like it shows promise, but when I see your tests, I still see 1/1 wood grain, and that kills it for me. I hear you. Nothing I can do about that, unfortunately. I will say this... The lines printed on the wood do a pretty good job of fooling the eyes. You see some light planks, and some dark planks in a nice variation - and the printed lines do tend to fool the brain into thinking that these are planks. Other areas in the wood that are darker or lighter across planks tend to look like stains or worn areas. And I do think that once you look at an entire model with etched brass and all the other detail that you eyes will take it all in and the reaction of the ship overall will be "wow." If you stare just at the wood, you can fixate on the grain pattern and your brain can conclude that it's "not right." Again, nothing I can do about that. For me, when it comes down to a choice between real wood with imperfect grain, or painting shades of tan - this wins hands down. Your opinion may vary, of course, as this is more of an art than a science. Thanks for the feedback, though. My parade is a little damp, but not drenched. ![]() |
Author: | Tracy White [ Tue Nov 30, 2010 1:03 am ] |
Post subject: | Re: Testing New Wood Deck Technique on 1/350 Zvezda Borodino |
Don't get me wrong; I see most photo-etch and it looks wrong to me too. It looks BETTER than nothing, but I've spent a lot of time looking at real ships, so my expectations and what I compare to in my head is a little different than a lot of people's. |
Page 1 of 6 | All times are UTC - 6 hours [ DST ] |
Powered by phpBB® Forum Software © phpBB Group https://www.phpbb.com/ |