Work did not cooperate with my desire to get back on the PT this week and I merely did little things here and there. However, I did make enough progress on one aspect to at least show photos of it. the Boats of PT Squadron NINE (Ron 9 from here on out) had the aft cockpit wall removed. I had noticed in
the original PT-157 photo that I posted that one of the sailors in the cockpit was significantly taller than the others, and then that Cdr. Kelley was towering over PT-156/8/9's captiain
here and
here.
I reached out to Bridgeman Carney of
PT-157 who has literally written not just "the" book on PT-157, but
two of them! What he said was that there was a fold-up step/platform in the cockpit, and I figured that this would be a fun little feature to help add some more life to the build.
First up was filling the alignment holes and slots for the aft cockpit wall that I wasn't using; I used some strip styrene to make this a little quicker and to avoid shrinking filler:
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Next were the two pieces I chose to do. There are a couple of supports underneath that aren't very visible and I chose to forgo them. The most complex of the two is the vertical support, which has a wasp waist shape and hole in the center. The top horizontal piece was a fixed portion about 4" wide before the hinge, and then the step. I did this as one piece with the joint between the two scribed in. Dimensions in 48th scale are:
Step length - 9.789mm
step fixed platform - 3.571mm
Step folding platform - 5.953mm
Step supportt Height - 10.583mm
Step support length - 8.202mm
Step lightening Hole - 2.645mm
Step Angle support - 3.968mm (this is one of the pieces I didn't do, but I include it in case others desire to)
Here we have the pieces cut out and the lightning hole drilled with a #36 or 37 drill bit (I think the former but don't have it with me):
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What's not really clear in the above photo is that I had split the vertical piece n the right when drilling it and trying to clean the leftover parts. I glued it back together, clamped between these two metal rulers to keep it straight, and then cleaned up the hole wit ha file instead and filled the little seam that remained. Finished product:
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Dark paint is just to adequately "shadow" the areas I can't get paint on when doing the true color. Yet uninstalled in this photo is a narrow step that ran to the front of the cockpit on the bulkhead. Getting closer!
_________________
Tracy White -
Researcher@Large"Let the evidence guide the research. Do not have a preconceived agenda which will only distort the result."
-
Barbara Tuchman