Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
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- Maarten Sch�nfeld
- Posts: 1835
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- Location: Herk-de-Stad, Belgium
Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
Include here a clipping from the complete hull lines plan in the NMM Greenwich. Very frustrating, the figures aren't readable.
"I've heard there's a wicked war a-blazing, and the taste of war I know so very well
Even now I see the foreign flag a-raising, their guns on fire as we sail into hell"
Roger Whittaker +9/13/2023
Even now I see the foreign flag a-raising, their guns on fire as we sail into hell"
Roger Whittaker +9/13/2023
- Maarten Sch�nfeld
- Posts: 1835
- Joined: Fri Dec 12, 2008 12:44 pm
- Location: Herk-de-Stad, Belgium
Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
95 feet 9 inches - unconfirmed though.Richard OMalley wrote:Can anyone tell me what the max Beam was for HMS Ark Royal at the water line ?
This is the same as the original figure for the Illustrious class, and I have no better data to go by.
"I've heard there's a wicked war a-blazing, and the taste of war I know so very well
Even now I see the foreign flag a-raising, their guns on fire as we sail into hell"
Roger Whittaker +9/13/2023
Even now I see the foreign flag a-raising, their guns on fire as we sail into hell"
Roger Whittaker +9/13/2023
- MartinJQuinn
- Posts: 8515
- Joined: Tue Jan 11, 2005 1:40 pm
- Location: New Jersey
Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
List of available kits and gallery entries added to the first page
Martin
"Tomorrow is the most important thing in life. Comes into us at midnight very clean. It's perfect when it arrives and it puts itself in our hands. It hopes we've learned something from yesterday." John Wayne
Ship Model Gallery
"Tomorrow is the most important thing in life. Comes into us at midnight very clean. It's perfect when it arrives and it puts itself in our hands. It hopes we've learned something from yesterday." John Wayne
Ship Model Gallery
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dhogue
- Posts: 9
- Joined: Mon Mar 26, 2012 11:36 pm
Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
Does anyone know when the Ark Royal got the port side Pom-Poms? I would think that she received them early in the war due to the importance of the ship
- Captain Morgan
- Posts: 255
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- Location: SE Michigan
Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
I read somewhere it was May 1941, but the only place she could have got them in May was Gibraltar.dhogue wrote:Does anyone know when the Ark Royal got the port side Pom-Poms? I would think that she received them early in the war due to the importance of the ship
My CO prior to flying to the boomer: Our goals on this patrol is to shoot missiles and torpedoes.
Me: Capt don’t we really want to be like Monty Python and not be seen?
LT you seem to be missing the big picture
Oh
Me: Capt don’t we really want to be like Monty Python and not be seen?
LT you seem to be missing the big picture
Oh
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iangazeley
- Posts: 75
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Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
There is a CAFO that lists the fitting of AA armament to RN ships, which includes Ark Royal's port pom-poms, but I can't now find my reference to it, but from memory I think it was May/June 1941. I've also not found a photo of a Skua and the port pom-poms, and 800 Squadron Skuas finally disembarked in April 1941.
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tjstoneman
- Posts: 443
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Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
Although only a secondary source, Kenneth Poolman Ark Royal (London: William Kimber, 1956) states "Just before Ark Royal sailed [for Operation Halberd, September 1941], her new port midships multiple pom-pom guns arrived on the dockside [in Gibraltar]. ... got them hoisted inboard and bolted down just in time." The book then says that the mountings (with extemporised crews) shot down two Italian torpedo-bombers in this operation.
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dhogue
- Posts: 9
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Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
Thanks for the Pom Pom info. Anyone have an opinion whether or not the open compass platform would have corticene or painted deck?
- Rob-UK
- Posts: 586
- Joined: Fri Feb 27, 2009 10:06 am
- Location: Leeds, UK.
Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
Here's a photo that we may not have seen before:

The Royal Navy Nelson-class battleship HMS Rodney and the Revenge-class battleship HMS Royal Oak can bee seen tied up at anchor as viewed from the flat top flight deck of the fleet aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal in Portsmouth Dockyard on 23 November 1938 in Portsmouth (Photo by Reg Speller/Fox Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images). Copyright: 2016 Getty Images
Those who know Portsmouth will get a good feel of the setting of where she is, and shows her deck fairly close up. Nice to see the two legendary battleships in the background too.

The Royal Navy Nelson-class battleship HMS Rodney and the Revenge-class battleship HMS Royal Oak can bee seen tied up at anchor as viewed from the flat top flight deck of the fleet aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal in Portsmouth Dockyard on 23 November 1938 in Portsmouth (Photo by Reg Speller/Fox Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images). Copyright: 2016 Getty Images
Those who know Portsmouth will get a good feel of the setting of where she is, and shows her deck fairly close up. Nice to see the two legendary battleships in the background too.
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drasticplastic
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- Location: Montreal, Canada
Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
What color is the flight deck at time of sinking? Also 507c?

- MartinJQuinn
- Posts: 8515
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- Location: New Jersey
Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
Bronze Grey, according to Mike W's earlier post: viewtopic.php?f=46&t=4870&start=240#p737564drasticplastic wrote:What color is the flight deck at time of sinking? Also 507c?
Martin
"Tomorrow is the most important thing in life. Comes into us at midnight very clean. It's perfect when it arrives and it puts itself in our hands. It hopes we've learned something from yesterday." John Wayne
Ship Model Gallery
"Tomorrow is the most important thing in life. Comes into us at midnight very clean. It's perfect when it arrives and it puts itself in our hands. It hopes we've learned something from yesterday." John Wayne
Ship Model Gallery
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drasticplastic
- Posts: 1439
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- Location: Montreal, Canada
Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
Was that the same, or similar, color (sea-sick - gray/green/yellow) shade that some Semtex deck coverings came in?

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drasticplastic
- Posts: 1439
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- Location: Montreal, Canada
Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
According to the Bronze-Grey paint formula, the main colors are yellow ochre and black, which gives an Olive-Drab color (the same combination US army used for vehicles, tanks, etc), but lightened with a considerable amount of white. So...a reasonable match could be made with Tamiya US Olive Drab and white? "Bronze-Grey" sounds like a confusing misnomer because neither of those two colors are in the mix!

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SovereignHobbies
- SovereignHobbies

- Posts: 1194
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- Location: Aberdeenshire, Scotland, UK
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Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
If you actually mix the formula up, you get this:


James Duff
Sovereign Hobbies Ltd
http://www.sovereignhobbies.co.uk
Current build:
HMS Imperial D09 1/350
viewtopic.php?f=59&t=167151
Sovereign Hobbies Ltd
http://www.sovereignhobbies.co.uk
Current build:
HMS Imperial D09 1/350
viewtopic.php?f=59&t=167151
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drasticplastic
- Posts: 1439
- Joined: Sun Aug 20, 2017 9:46 am
- Location: Montreal, Canada
Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
So...that's just the same as US Olive Drab!!

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drasticplastic
- Posts: 1439
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- Location: Montreal, Canada
Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
Was Bronze-Gray meant as a camo measure? Was it used on gun sponson decks and catwalks (ie. all horizontal surfaces), or were these deck gray, and Bronze Gray only on the flight deck?

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SovereignHobbies
- SovereignHobbies

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Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
Howdy.
All I know about this stuff is that it was introduced by AFO 1949 in 1933 which was entitled "PAINT FOR SPRAYING OF FLIGHT DECKS (AIRCRAFT CARRIERS)", and its formulation is given in the Rate Book in 1933 as well as 1937(??) again but with the pigmentation adjusted as the RN had switched to a new black which was much stronger staining than the old black paint which was used, and the black was reduced accordingly to preserve the resultant shade.
I lost my copy of AFO1949/33 in a hard drive crash and haven't been back to Kew to retrieve one yet. (it's not included in the set sent to the RAN and available to download from there, possibly because there were no aircraft carriers in the RAN and it would have been irrelevant). I don't recall that AFO1949/33 said anything either way about the choice of colour and its purpose, although I suppose a dark olive isn't the worst colour one could choose to conceal from above against the dirty coloured Home Waters in overcast conditions.
There is nothing special about Admiralty Pattern 631 Bronze Grey as a paint to make it more or less suited to flight decks. The AFO merely prescribed its use for aircraft carrier flight decks and gave instruction on how it was to be used in conjunction with red lead primer and saw dust to create a surface for a flight deck. I dare say the mechanical properties of the flight deck is so far as the tyres on aircraft wheels would care would have been identical using any of the linseed oil paints they used.
All I know about this stuff is that it was introduced by AFO 1949 in 1933 which was entitled "PAINT FOR SPRAYING OF FLIGHT DECKS (AIRCRAFT CARRIERS)", and its formulation is given in the Rate Book in 1933 as well as 1937(??) again but with the pigmentation adjusted as the RN had switched to a new black which was much stronger staining than the old black paint which was used, and the black was reduced accordingly to preserve the resultant shade.
I lost my copy of AFO1949/33 in a hard drive crash and haven't been back to Kew to retrieve one yet. (it's not included in the set sent to the RAN and available to download from there, possibly because there were no aircraft carriers in the RAN and it would have been irrelevant). I don't recall that AFO1949/33 said anything either way about the choice of colour and its purpose, although I suppose a dark olive isn't the worst colour one could choose to conceal from above against the dirty coloured Home Waters in overcast conditions.
There is nothing special about Admiralty Pattern 631 Bronze Grey as a paint to make it more or less suited to flight decks. The AFO merely prescribed its use for aircraft carrier flight decks and gave instruction on how it was to be used in conjunction with red lead primer and saw dust to create a surface for a flight deck. I dare say the mechanical properties of the flight deck is so far as the tyres on aircraft wheels would care would have been identical using any of the linseed oil paints they used.
James Duff
Sovereign Hobbies Ltd
http://www.sovereignhobbies.co.uk
Current build:
HMS Imperial D09 1/350
viewtopic.php?f=59&t=167151
Sovereign Hobbies Ltd
http://www.sovereignhobbies.co.uk
Current build:
HMS Imperial D09 1/350
viewtopic.php?f=59&t=167151
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dick
- Posts: 679
- Joined: Wed Oct 24, 2007 1:44 pm
- Location: UK
Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
The AFO is quite specific. It was for the flight decks:
- mister me
- Posts: 605
- Joined: Mon Oct 22, 2012 3:40 am
- Location: Vincennes, FRANCE
Re: Calling all HMS Ark Royal (WW2) fans
hello,
as it seems (at least to my eyes) that Ark royal did have 2 Taylors type anchors (?) starboard side and one Wasteney Smith type anchor (?) portside, and that 1/350 merit anchors are known to be too small, do you know if there are some aftermarket replacement parts existing ?
as it seems (at least to my eyes) that Ark royal did have 2 Taylors type anchors (?) starboard side and one Wasteney Smith type anchor (?) portside, and that 1/350 merit anchors are known to be too small, do you know if there are some aftermarket replacement parts existing ?
Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead! - David Glasgow Farragut
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rpledm
- Posts: 1
- Joined: Fri Jan 13, 2012 11:54 pm
I Love Kit 1/350 Item No. 65307 HMS Ark Royal 1939
Is there a missing partial deck at the stern for this ship? There are six half walls installed to support it.