Hi Guys ,
hereby some explanations why I will begin with the building of that particular "Man-O-War"...
First of all , the characteristics :
HMS Zinnia was a sloop , belonging to the so called "Flower" class , built under the "Emergency War Programme"
She was built by Swan Hunter on the Tyne , wore the yard number 1000 , and was laid down in 1915
the WW1 "Flower" class was subdivided in three classes , the "Arabis , "Azalea" & "Acacia" sub-classes
dimensions & displacement varied between the classes , the "Arabis" being two feet longer ( 252 feet lon OA for 250 feet for the others ) and displaced 50 tons more than the two other types.
Most of them were equiped with mine sweeping equipment .
All of them were conceived to attain the speed of 18 knots , but most of them never attained the designed speed once in their lives , their four cylinder triple expansion engines only delivering 1400 IHP , while they should have had to devellop 2400 IHP to attain & sustain 18 knots in service ...
They were known to be very good sea boats ( according to the 1920 Jane's Fighting Ships )
72 of them were built , 56 survived the WW1.
HMS Zinnia was put in reserve in 1919 & was built by Belgium in 1920 , together with three "Mersey" class drifters & one ship who wore the name of HMS Kernot during WW2 , but I couldn't verify the type nor the class of Kernot by now ...
Zinnia ( the name remained the same , without the HMS, of course ) was intended to be used as a fishery protection vessel , duty she did without any major problem till 1940 , when she was seized by the nazis , at Ostend , badly damaged by an air bomb .
She was towed to Germany , refitted with a new more modern stem , and sailed in the Baltic as a artillery training vessel for the Kriegs Marine crews
In 1945 , she was found somewhere in germany , and brought back to Belgium , got her function & name back .
But the "State Navy" ( a Belgian State Marine has been created during the 1800 to protect the borders and the sea in there , the governements at that time never wanted to have a real "Navy" , with real "sailors" and real "ships" with guns ) didn't express the wish to keep Zinnia , too obsolete for the intended missions .
So , Zinnia was transferred to the just born "Force navale/Zeemacht" , the maritime military part of the belgian ministry of defence , the RNSB ( Royal Navy belgian Section ) having been dismissed by the British Admiralty in ... ... 1946
But the Belgian Navy , having renamed her "Breydel" , could do nothing with her , too old to be efficient ( she was still coal fired ) , and so she was sold for scrap in 1949 , she was put into pieces at Boom , near Antwerpen ...
My motivation , to me , to build that model is multiple :
1 . I love her lines
2 . She is a part of my Country's History
3 . I always have built merchant ships , and for my first "man-O-war" , I wanted something easy to begin with ( even if I'm not a beginner in scratch building ship models )
About ten or twelve years ago , I began to look after plans in Belgium , at the State Marine Archives , where they told me they never had plans of those ships , blah-blah-blah
Knowing meanwhile that the ship was built in UK , I contacted in 1998 the NMM at Greenwich , where they were pleased to send me plans for the Zinnia ( and not for a sister ship ) , for the "small" fee of 99 UK£
(Outch ! it hurted a lot

)
So , after having dreamed of this ship for more than 15 years from now , I decided to begin with the building , be prepared to see something "else" , I'm a convinced user of "Bristol" cardboard instead of polystyrol or ABS , much cheaper & even strong and even watertight when coated properly ( the guys frequenting the Debris Field Message board know about what I'm speaking here ... )
hereby some scans of the plans I bought at the NMM ...
Profile :
Forecastle deck:
hull lines :
Shell expansion plan :
the frames , drawn on paper ang glued on a 3mm thick ply plank :
That's it for today , you'll get an update very soon , it's weekend right now !
Regards ,
laurent
_________________
Scared of Nothing , Always Thirsty
Just call me the "Cereals Box Killer" , I guess
