And so it begins. The first 18 of the 24 ships I am building for the Royal Navy and the Turks for 1880. The Turks are at the top and the RN below. This is the early hull assembly stage as in each case the top deck has a white edge that I paint before sticking it to the hull. The Royal Navy will also have a brick red lower hull with a white trim or ‘boot strapping’. There are six models not featured above as these will require some additional attention.
It has been an eventful week. On Monday one of the sprung brackets that operate the loft hatch decided to shear a bolt. The net effect of this is that the entire hatch cover swerved alarmingly to the sprung side and headed downwards. It meant that it needed to come down entirely for safety reasons and so I began the somewhat fruitless task of locating a tradesman that specialised in lofts but not just installing them. I had mixed success but fortunately my son came to the rescue and so Saturday morning (in fact ALL of Saturday morning) between the two of us the loft hatch was recommissioned. In fact it now hangs more squarely than previously and so is less likely to have the same problem. One of the mounting brackets had been placed around the wrong way, hence the tendency to veer to the right and the increased strain on the side that the bolt sheared.
Thursday saw Laurel, Holly and I attending the funeral of a longtime family friend. It went as well as these things can do and my eulogy was well received despite the emotion of the occasion. We are still feeling the after effects of our loss and so, needless to say, life has been a little muted.
In many ways the opportunity of today - now that the loft was back in commission - was a welcome distraction, aside from the fact that I needed to be ‘cracking on’ with stuff.
The picture above shows the progress thus far and I am pretty pleased with what I have achieved. The main part of the ship hull has been assembled in each of the above. All will need the top deck added (along with the appropriate deck detail) and in the case of four of the Turkish ships, the barbette. Everything you see thus far will be black. There are three Royal Navy vessels as yet unassembled and three for the Turks making 24 of the 23 of the 16 models I originally envisaged building….
Project creep? Moi? Nah, never gonna happen…
David,
ReplyDeleteIt sounds as if you’ve had a pretty awful week. The death of any close friend can be devastating, as I know from personal experience. Add to that a domestic DIY problem that isn’t easy to fix … and your cup did truly runneth over.
I hope you have a better week this week.
All the best,
Bob
Thanks Bob - much appreciated. As a wise man once said “The show must go on” - so it will!
DeleteAll the best,
DC
David -
ReplyDeleteProject creep, if one fails to rein it in betimes, is apt to become a bally project stampede. That's what's happened to me - in the last week or so building sixteen galleys, 4 sea-going transports, and working out a Roman Civil War campaign in the Western Mediterranean, sea and littoral. Looks like I might be playing the thing out in a day or two.
I do admire your ships and your construction methods. My own are much less precise, so that my ships, however similar in appearance, are never identical...
Cheers,
Ion
Hi Ion,
DeleteThe project creep in this case was kind of built in up to a point but that point has now been crossed (actually trampled over if truth be told!) in a fairly substantial way. No details yet but it will be a lot of fun!
I really liked those galleys and reckon a quick Roman Civil War campaign should be a lot of fun - “Venisti, Vidisti, Vici” and all that!
All the best,
DC
The boatyards have certainly been busy David…
ReplyDeleteYou are going to have a lovely looking collection when they are finished…
I suspect ‘Loft Hatch’ repair men are far and few between 😁
All the best. Aly
Thanks Aly - you see what is coming next!
DeleteAll the best,
DC