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PostPosted: Fri Nov 29, 2024 10:37 am 
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Aren't these the dress caps only. Sailor seem to have two sets of uniforms (at least), one set the dress kit and the other working kit.

I have a late 19th century book that describes the dress regulations for RN officers, but don't have a comparable reference for ordinary seamen or petty officers. I am sure that there also have been over the decades illustrations of the changing RN uniforms.

A few months ago I acquired a very hefty two-volume work on the uniforms of the German Kaiserliche Marine that came out a few years earlier (plus the less comprehensive works published in the past). Shouldn't there be something equivalent for the RN?

If it is appropriate for the time and the circumstances, I think a tiny red spot would provide added visual interest to the crew.

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PostPosted: Fri Nov 29, 2024 11:11 am 
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Ha! :big_grin: :wave_1:

@ wefalck-- Bretagne-- Marine Francais...not RN ?

as I understand it ... matelots, white summer uniforms, midshipman and junior officers white trousers/dark navy jackets senior officers all Navy
( concluded & deducted from a book of old postcards of the French Navy--albeit back and white images !)

seems the naval uniform, in 1850/60s; were relatively unchanged for the matelost 'till 1900 or so

assuming the red pommel on the cap to be 50 mm wide.... that means my sailors would have pommels 700 x smaller on their caps

that equates to 0.07 mm diameter--- I may--just to please you.. :thumbs_up_1: .. endeavour to pu ta tiny dot on SOME (only!) of the sailirs caps

eheehh!
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PostPosted: Fri Nov 29, 2024 3:06 pm 
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Hello all again.--

the tedium and stress of rigging a ship this delicate is considerable

The images below are still a work in progress

No reefing tackles, Yard braces or leech control lines etc have been done yet;
The amount of required line is simply staggering when studied and investigated.....! :wacko:

already I have only managed around 50%-- and probably my will may be caving in shortly!

The problem arising is that to add more.... risks breaking existing!

I will have to compromise

( Perhaps I should have built it in a bigger scale !! LoL :big_grin:

More tomorrow!


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PostPosted: Fri Nov 29, 2024 3:12 pm 
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WOW! That rigging looks amazing. And complicated. And stressful.

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PostPosted: Fri Nov 29, 2024 4:54 pm 
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OOOPS, where was I mentally :huh: :doh_1: :mad_2:

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PostPosted: Sat Nov 30, 2024 8:19 am 
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End of 1800:

There were two outfits for the sailors, white and blue, often mixed on deck, white-grey or blue, as in the early 1900s. No rules.
White grey for chores.

Depending on rank:

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1892:

Pierre Loti aboard the gunboat Javelot, 1892. Pierre Loti, pseudonym of Julien Viaud (1850-1923), French novelist and naval officer. Excerpt from Spanish and American Illustration, 1892 (black and white coloured print).

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PostPosted: Sat Nov 30, 2024 8:37 am 
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Hi there Meister Baumann and all,

JIM BAUMANN wrote:
The amount of required line is simply staggering when studoed and investigated..... (...)The problem the problem arising is that to add more.... risks breaking existing!
I will have to compromise

Definitely, yes. There is a compromise that has to be achieved in every scale, let alone in this 1/700 rigging !!! I am amazed at this construction, even more delicate than a more modern man-o-war in steel and steam.

Fantastic updates. You and Marjin make my days lately.

Keep them coming, and all the best from this side,

Willie.

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PostPosted: Sat Nov 30, 2024 8:40 am 
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wefalck wrote:
OOOPS, where was I mentally :huh: :doh_1: :mad_2:


I would say no need to worry. Most commonly macro pictures make an ambush in every scene. My own experience, hence the need of a reference.

Nice going and best regards,

Willie.

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PostPosted: Tue Dec 03, 2024 1:05 am 
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Jim, your rigging skills are superb, to say the least. Having giving it all a try now and then I know what I´m talking about, and know how difficult and frustrating it is.

Congratulations and my best wishes for the further steps from

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PostPosted: Tue Dec 03, 2024 3:43 am 
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Thank you Gentleman all--I feel much encouraged--

! thank you for the sailors coloured lithographs-- most helpful--and also confirmatory of my thoughts! :thumbs_up_1:



interim quandary -Dolphin striker..


.-that being the spar that acts as a truss at the underside of the bow-sprit

Traditionally....( and in my amateur engineering understanding) is is set perpendicular to the bowsprit

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and so it was designed on the Bretgane ....

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However-- all ( competent ) images and the some photo where the bow is visible

show a different picture...

the famous ' Roux painting.. that inspired me to build this ship shows the Dolphin striker at an unusual angle

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as does a painting by 'Roux of ship Borda

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as does this engraving ( based on a photo surely? )

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as does this one ....

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and not confined to bg 3 deckers

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but confirmed in my mind by the sole photo of the ship with bowsprit visible

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.( I have already done it like that on my model-)

-but I want to know...Why??? :big_grin: :big_grin:

it would be at such a jaunty angle rather that the more usual 90 degrees to the spar?

more images of the model shortly! :thumbs_up_1:

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PostPosted: Wed Dec 04, 2024 7:26 pm 
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Was Dolphin Striker (what a name) adjustable or fixed in place?

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PostPosted: Thu Dec 05, 2024 6:53 am 
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Hi pascalemod

pascalemod wrote:
Was Dolphin Striker (what a name) adjustable or fixed in place?


In portuguese is "Pica-peixe" (fish stinger) and it is fixed.

Cheers,
Rui

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 06, 2024 2:44 pm 
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"Dolphin Striker " is a bit mean-..!
-especially as some had a point ( decorative...?!) on the lower end.....

the usual format... ( images courtesy of ShutterStock online)

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a bit more vicious looking... with intent...!

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and is there no end to the imagination...? :scratch:

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.................................................................................................................................................................................................................


...and now back the serious business of modelship building... :big_grin:


The rigging of this , just under 43/4 inch.... ( 115 mm ) long ship is taking some doing....
==> and is costing both frayed nerves and tempers... :Mad_5: :censored_2:

In 1/350-double the scale--it would be ( probably ) clearer to see,

and better proportioned for my 1/1 scale eyesight and tweezers ...!!-

-even though I am working x 5 magnified....

anyhow-- below some images ...

Assembling the sails/yards onto the mainmast...
==> with it supported in the loving embrace of 'blue-tak on a post-it note block,

ensures constant angles of oblique yards to mast


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I use 0.05 copper wire ( very pliable) glued onto the clews as sheets,
so that they can be wrapped around the yard-arms ( almost) imperceptibly to give clew to yard location
to ensure the sheeting gap is not too small or too large ( fine line of balance!)

and a very fine slightly spring thread to tie the yard arms to the mast

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Upon ' masting .....I encountered either ,.... my inability to measure stuff correctly...(?!)

or ....

the phenomena of paint build up on the bottom of the mast; as it simply Would NOT Fit the aperture :mad_1: : :censored_2:

ergo quite brutal intervention....


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The main problem with rigging within the constraints of this small scale is........

... that for every successfully applied piece of rigging-- One can break or ruin a lot more...!

Persistence, doggedness, gritted teeth and a closed model room door ( that way the family cannot hear the shouting and swearing tantrums ! :big_grin: :heh: )

can.... Eeeeeeventually ....lead to success

below is illustrated how the stretched sprue is attached to the dead-eye-
-then draped into desired position,
and weighed down with a ( very small and light )blob of
stretched sprue plastic with a ' tail ' that has been tacked onto the loose tail-end of the rigging.

Nerve racking and the attrition & waste rate is high...



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The bowsprit rigging ( not complete yet ) I did with 0.047 Nitinol self straightening wire f
from Modellkasten
This was significant, as the bowsprit rigging performs a structural function-
for when the 3 x headsails are attached to it


detail below of Nintinol wire
( ignore the annoying voice--it is amazing )

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JKBM9my5eOA

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and I then experimented with head sail install--
needs more practice , better temper and longer 'fuse..!
.........................................................................................................

Installing the braces...

Ha! trying to get the braces rigging in between all the halyards on aft face of the mast was a challenge
( epic understatement !)

with much breakage...( also an epic understatement !)


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I did however notice a positive among it all....
--that the sails are pleasingly translucent when backlit !

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The feel and colouring I am trying to achieve is a combination of the below images--all French ships of a similar era

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Note in the below painting of ' Napoleon--there is visible ...

tantalisingly .... !

-the stern of the BRETAGNE and a bit of mast /sails !!!

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and the black and ' white ' feel version



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Much more soon

JIM B :wave_1:

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PostPosted: Sat Dec 07, 2024 7:32 am 
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Now I understand why you kept postponing your 5 masted Agincourt. 40% more work. Very nice rigging.


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PostPosted: Sat Dec 07, 2024 11:59 am 
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Hi Pieter !

" Pieter wrote;"
Now I understand why you kept postponing your 5 masted Agincourt. 40% more work. Very nice rigging.


...............................................................................................................................................................
Ha!

>>> Pieter and I digress briefly from Bretagne...! <<<

back in 2013....
viewtopic.php?f=59&t=152331


But the actual reason for the postponement was that I posted the hull to the USA to be cast



alas......... the caster ( BFM Harry) vanished/ passed away--
==> -thereby I will have to re-make another hull

( which is very much easier than the Bretagne... !!

only one wider-spaced row of gun-ports and only one colour ! :big_grin:

The full rig with sqare AND aft 2 x sails.... will be quite an undertaking and very impressive
though I plan to do so...in 1/700 a

Just like in the image below...
:thumbs_up_1:

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.( but with the, in the image above missing topsails, as below !)

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The Agincourt and Minotaur ( and Cumberland ) aft 2 masts ( unlike Preussen !) are often seen only fore and aft rigged ....
reducing the work greatly and simpler...(??!!)

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or not rigged at all

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as John Prothero-Thomas did in double the scale 1/384..

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of course a 'cop-out :big_grin:.... would be to make her as in the 1890's,
- re-rigged with 3 masts....

but aside from huge length these vessels ( 124 metres / 407 feet (!!)
would be visually a trifle dull...( !?)

Best wishes JB


---though the wider spaced masts would make it easier to rig... !!!

Attachment:
HMS_Minotaur_(1863)_in_the_1890s.jpg
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PostPosted: Sun Dec 08, 2024 10:53 am 
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Thank you. Still sad that Harry is no longer with us. Did you make the hull/lines plans yourself?


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PostPosted: Sun Dec 08, 2024 4:32 pm 
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No... the plans were drawn up by John Prother Thomas for his projcet

I have overlaid ( on the PC ) the National Maritime Museum ( scaled )deck plans over it and it is pretty good, along with a dead side-on image of Minotaur and everything lines up--aside from the real thing having slightly more mast rake progressively aft.

Attachment:
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...................................................................................................................................................................................

and ( back To Bretagne...!) talking of aft mast rake...
This Sunday ( 08 December ) I had a clear plan!

==> To rig and install the mizzen mast and fetch Christmas Tree ! :thumbs_up_1:


The Christmas tree was easy, fire up the 1915 'T, and Katrin and I pottered off... get tree and come back simples.

alas it was cold, veeery cold and veeeery windy

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the mizzen mast took some doing, but it was the same procedure as on the other masts

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at least now --aside from the headsails--- the ship is no longer looking ' undressed'......


still needs to be rigged though--with now a new challenge-

- all the braces for the Mizzen mast cannot go aft ...( as no more masts !)

so have to go fwd -and criss cross with the main mast braces....

That will be a busy time I suspect.... ( :censored_2: :Mad_5: )

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=============================================================

and... yes I was right it was cold, 5 degree Centigrade , and a bit of drizzle and a 30-40 knot breeze ..!

I was somewhat under-dressed for the Christmas Tree adventure -

-and in the end I was completely cold through and through ...

==> By the time we got home, after 20 odd miles ...

I was so cold.... I just could not crack a smile any more !

Bah Humbug !

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more rigging soon :wave_1:

JB

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 09, 2024 4:03 pm 
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It is so entertaining to follow this epic build!
The ship is looking much better than I could ever imagine, and knowing what you are capable of, my expectations were really high!


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By jove ! I lost (again) my eyes !

That's an incredible job, and a unique source of inspiration :)
Now I can go back to play with my lego !

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 13, 2024 12:45 pm 
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Thank you gentlemen :wave_1: !

It is a slow grind.... there is sooo much rigging, and it needs to be to scale (ish)! so that its
handleable for 1/700 sailors hands. the procedures are slow, fiddly and dull to describe.
the best made plans-of-procedure seldom work out--
needing much tweezer acrobatics aft where the mizzen and main mast yard braces over-lap in the same air space!

any how herewith some images,



general overview of status quo yesterday 12 /12/ 24

Attachment:
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more detail within...

I had wrapped the mizzen mast with black thin thread to simulate the loose lacing of the spanker sail ,

which always leaves a small gap between sail and mast,--
==> however it was not to my liking when the sail went on

Attachment:
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I added the ' extension of the lacing to the 'eyelets ' with stretched sprue
it looks significantly better and more feasible

Attachment:
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I had previously inserted the aft davits , made of thin PE strip
cut out of parts from an old over-scale PE detail set into the hull ,
they were strong
but only O.4 mm thick ( the correct width @ .75 mm) though )

I thickened them up using some old ( 1998!) WEM 1/350 oars as another layer.

The davits have a gentle curve--I had to repeat that and x 4 they all had to same!

I inserted the curve in collectively on a note pad with a small brass tube

Attachment:
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tacked on at the inboard end only with thinned matt varnish ( quick grab but strength!)
aligned and then CA glue along the outside gap applied with my 0.1mm wire applicator in a pinchuck 'tool ' :thumbs_up_1:


Attachment:
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and the final effort below is now (near) square
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I also added the chain plates to the shroud channels

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and then 'cleaned up' the outer edge of the channels
( have chain-plates and shrouds terminating there) with a piece of 0.1mm wire



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I started to ' hang ' the boats I had previously prepared

==> easy on the stern.... :cool_2:

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The midships davits ( sprouting out between the shrouds ) will be installed shortly for the whalers x 4

I knew that the aft davits carried gigs and longboats
in some photos, paintings etc these are depicted with covers

so... I set to it!

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and after making midships davist ( of more chopped up overscale double layered 1/350 oars !)

I could start hanging a whaler or two...

these were held up with my will power!
so I used a make-shift support while the glue set

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Keen eyed observer will spot that a bridge has been installed ! :thumbs_up_1:

I made the fourth version (!!) using some GMM PE gold plus superfine railing that was over-etched


( thinner and cheaper PE 'seconds...)-- just how I like it! :heh:

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_________________
....I buy them at three times the speed I build 'em.... will I live long enough to empty my stash...?
http://www.modelshipgallery.com/gallery ... index.html

IPMS UK SIG (special interest group) www.finewaterline.com


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