HMS Surprise by Mamoli

OK all those items I finished over the last couple of days I mounted, except for the forward capstan. I also mounted two of the cannon on the larboard side with breech lines. All my Passaro blocks are at my other residence so I'll rig them out completely next month. Wow, with the Covid I'm getting so much time in with Surprise that I'll be done with all the deck furniture way ahead of schedule. I won't be surprised if I don't start with the masting by March at the latest.


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Pin rail forward of the main mast. I've gotta say these pin racks are one royal pain in the a**. Very complicated and time consuming. The finished product is pretty nice however so I guess the time invested is worth it.kjdfkl.dfjc.jpgifjdlfjkd.jpgklajhgkjh.jpg



The beginning of the belfry and final pin rack just aft of the fore mast.


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Shot racks for gun deck cannon.

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Shot racks for weather deck cannon.


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Inboard railing to keep drunken sailors from falling down to the gun deck.


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That's all for a couple of weeks. Off to my other residence and more work on Rattlesnake.
 
I finished up the three gratings that go on the gun deck underneath the longboat as well at the longboat cradle. All these pieces are made from Walnut so even with a neutral clear stain they are of a very dark hue. When placed on top of the gun deck the starkness in colors between the deck planking and the gratings was extreme and I didn't like it one bit. So I "watered down" some Minwax Golden Oak and applied another coat on the deck planking. I sure Forrest Gumped my way through this part of the project, the end result I really like. I also added some shot racks along the side of each large grating, this feature is not on the plans. I'll install the cannon balls after planking the hull and Surprise is right side up again.

The second picture is the kit provided cast longboat which I won't use. I just ordered another Falconet longboat that I just finished for my Rattlesnake build, this is picture three. It's 5mm longer than the kit provided boat but it'll fit just perfect in the longboat cradle.

The last picture is an example of the supports for the deck immediately above the gundeck, forecastle up front and quarterdeck in the rear, notice the camber that the false deck and then deck planks will follow. The plans call for the center pillar being 21.5mm long. I found the camber to be very pronounced and so I shaved a bit off that central pillar, it's more like 20mm long now.

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Yes, I agree, that 21.5 mm post really makes quite the camber on the deck. Unfortunately, I did follow the directions and did mine to that height. We'll see if it comes out okay later. I, too, am building the Mamoli 1:75 HMS Surprise kit.
 
Four rows of planks from the gun ports moving down installed. I'm being more mathematical this time, instead of eyeballing the narrowing fore and aft of hull planks I'm measuring and cutting more precisely than I have in the past. So far I'm amazed at how smoothly it's going. The planking from the gun ports up is very simple. I'm almost at the point where the coppering will begin and move towards the keel and so far no big gaps or bumps. Maybe I've learned something from my previous four builds and it's easier this time....

I also lept ahead a bit in the plans and installed the aft most two gun ports on the larboard side just to see how the process works. The gun ports are solidly installed and will be trimmed up so the protruding wood will be cut off and/or sanded off flush. Then the second planking will neaten the look of the gun port nicely in my opinion. The way the plans/practicum has the order of things, however, was to install the main false deck first, then begin the hull planking, THEN install the gun ports. Again, easy enough to cut/sand flush the protruding wood of the gun ports but the problem is two-fold: First, there is going to be massive amounts of sanding to get the first planking ready for the second planking/coppering. All that dust is going to end up in the now closed up gun deck because the main deck false deck is now installed. Somehow I must get all that sand dust out of the closed up gun deck. Secondly, the 13 completed (I'm working on them between installing hull planks) gun carriages complete with cannon MUST be installed prior to closing up the upper hull and sanding as the false deck is irreparably installed . These are not false cannon plugging the gun port holes, they are complete carriages. I'm not detailing too much of the carriages other than iron straps to hold down the cannon mounting points but they will still be sticking out proud when I begin trimming the protruding wood of the gun ports and sanding like a maniac. If I did this model again I would have installed the cannons first,THEN installed the main deck. Food for thought for those coming up behind me.

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I am at the point ot installing the (impossible to make) gunports. How did you determine the correct locations for the ports, as the directions say nothing, and the main drawings are actually not to the correct scale.
 
I am at the point ot installing the (impossible to make) gunports. How did you determine the correct locations for the ports, as the directions say nothing, and the main drawings are actually not to the correct scale.


I started with the aft most gun port, then the forward most gunport, measured the total distance and divided by the number of gun ports. This gives the basic distance between each port. In practice it doesn't work exactly because there are bulkheads in at least two locations that are right in the middle of the gun port and obviously that just doesn't work. So I fudged a bit here and a bit there when needed. The end result is uneven spacing between some of the ports but the difference isn't enough to detect.
 
I started with the aft most gun port, then the forward most gunport, measured the total distance and divided by the number of gun ports. This gives the basic distance between each port. In practice it doesn't work exactly because there are bulkheads in at least two locations that are right in the middle of the gun port and obviously that just doesn't work. So I fudged a bit here and a bit there when needed. The end result is uneven spacing between some of the ports but the difference isn't enough to detect.
Thanks for the info. It is also good to check out ALL the plansheets while working on this. I finally found a sheet in the Rigging plans that has the ports shadowed on. Of course, the plansheet is not to the same scale as the actual ship, so I fudged a factor to use in getting the distances. Sounds like we both had fun with this step!
 
How did you deal with the gunports? It looks like there is a little support that is supposed to go through the deck in "special holes", but I cannot find anything in the plans that call for setting those up. I an adding a 3mm brace at the inside edge of the lower portion of the gunport.
 
How did you deal with the gunports? It looks like there is a little support that is supposed to go through the deck in "special holes", but I cannot find anything in the plans that call for setting those up. I an adding a 3mm brace at the inside edge of the lower portion of the gunport.


I placed a piece of wood (I used leftover first planking lime strips) on either side of the square gun ports. I made sure to follow the curve of the hull and the end result was a very nice point on either side of the gun port to glue down the first planking strip. So, first plank from the line flush with the lower edge of the gun ports down to the keel. Then install the gun ports. Then plank up to the wales. Make sense?
 
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