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Greetings from the Finger lakes

  • Thread starter Thread starter RussF
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Hello from the (currently frigid) Finger Lakes of New York! Home of lovely lakes, world class wines and gorgeous gorges. Ok, enough alliterative superlatives. :rolleyes:

My name is Russ. I joined the forum about four months ago and have just been lurking and reading as many posts as time permitted. I really like the community and feel I've already gotten to know many of the regular posters. I figured it was time to introduce myself and start contributing.

I've been modeling in some form or another most of my life. My mother gave me my first plastic kit at around age seven - a '50s vintage pickup/tow truck. I can't remember the exact model. She enjoyed paint-by-number kits and was somewhat dismayed when my "kit", unlike hers, didn't include everything needed to build the model. Times were tough and being frugal, she handed me a bottle of Elmers glue and some leftover pots of oil paint from one her kits.

Yeah, that went well.

Undeterred, I went on to build numerous plastic cars, planes and ships, then to model rockets, some Guillows stick & tissue airplanes (none of which would actually fly), some control-line airplanes (some of which flew), and I dabbled in RC - a couple that flew.

I purchased my first wooden ship model in 1978. A Billings Danmark on sale for $44.95. That was when they were selling the kits in two parts - hull kits and fittings kits. I just bought the hull kit because it was all I could afford, figuring I would pick up the fittings kit later. I did eventually get the hull planked and decked with most of the deck furniture installed, but by that time, the fittings kits were no longer available separately. It languished, surviving numerous moves - until one time it didn't. I miss that ship.

Without boring you with too many details, I'll mention that my career started in Information Technology in the early '80s. Getting burned out and wanting to try something different, I went to work for a furniture manufacturer in 2007 building high end wooden office furniture. In 2018, I had a slight disagreement with a sliding table saw and lost my right index finger, half of the pinkie and lost most of the range of motion of the other two fingers. Working with power tools most of your life can (will) lead to a sense of complacency. A millisecond's distraction is all it takes for disaster to strike. And yes, it was my dominant hand. I'm still at the same company, but back in an I.T. roll, keeping all the little lights blinking on the network.

When I first found out that they had to amputate the fingers, the first thing I said to the Admiral was that I was going to get a 3D printer and make myself a new finger. And so I did.

Much therapy and a lot of Lego kits to work on my dexterity, I'm now able to do most everything I did before. Sometimes it takes longer and has to be done differently, but it can be done.

I have ordered and finally received Pavel Nikitin's Oseberg V3 in 1:25 and I'll attempt to do a build log on her.

Thank you for welcoming me - I look forward to being a contributing member of this community.

Cheers,
 
Vey interesting story, if not terrifying at times. Well told Russ. Passed your way many times when traveling on business and do love the racetrack at The Glen. Yours is a beautiful part of the world.
Allan
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Hi there and welcome to SOS, It looks like you will be starting a great build. I have the Oseberg 3 ordered and "think" it will start it's journey the USA later this month. So I will pull up a front row chair to follow your log. I have gerat memories of the finger lake region, When my Dad was in the USAF and stationed at Sampson AFB we lived in Waterloo. I had a great time fishing in the Erie Canal.

Jan
 
Thank you for the warm welcomes.

...do love the racetrack at The Glen

Yes, always a good time at Watkins.

When my Dad was in the USAF and stationed at Sampson AFB we lived in Waterloo.

Sampson is a very interesting place to visit now. For a while, a company was giving bus tours through the Seneca Army Depot (across the road from Sampson) to see the population of white deer that had developed within the fences. We live on Keuka Lake.

I have the Oseberg 3 ordered and "think" it will start it's journey the USA later this month.

I will detail it more in my log, but I ordered mine on 1 Nov and received it 26 Dec. Supply chain issues, no doubt. Then it arrived with no assembly manual. Pavel's assistant, Denis, emailed a PDF version a few days later and offered to mail an original, but I told them to keep it. With shipping costs the way they are, sending that manual would probably eat up most or all of the profit from the kit. Stay tuned...

Thanks again for the welcomes.
 
Have you watched any of Pavel's You Tube videos for the Oseberg V3, there are ten so far.


Jan

Yes, with no manual for a few days and wanting to get started, I was able to get the first building jig assembled using only the video - it's pretty straight-forward. Watching the second video, I put the two layers of keel together and started on the ribs. Then I encountered the first problem. Pavel shows just gluing the pieces of each layer (there are two) of the keel together freehand. Now, with any laser cut parts, there will be a slight taper to the edges - the thicker the piece, the more pronounced the taper. Pavel does nothing to clean this up for the keel, just pushing the pieces together and filling in the gap with glue. We all know that a glue joint made up mostly of glue will not hold. Dry fitting the pieces together, I saw lots of light shining through the gaps, so I lightly cleaned up the taper and char, just enough to get a good fit. The two layers of the keel are held together with wooden pegs through pre-cut square holes. Pavel just took one layer, laid it on the other and started driving pins. I laid one keel layer on top and the pinholes started diverging from one-another along the length. In fact, one layer was a full 1/8" longer than the other. I did not remove that much material. Upon laying each layer onto the full-size drawing, both layers were longer than the drawing. Sigh. Now I am left with the painstaking task of measuring the rib locations on the jig and comparing it with the keels and the drawings because I now don't know which is correct. I feel it's important to get the rib-slots in the keel to align with the support notches in the jig.

That's where I am right now, so I will let you know what I discover. (Haha, this was all going to go into my log - probably will repeat it so it's all in one place.)

Anyway - I have some measuring to do.
 
That is interesting.It will be some time before I start that build, I have a few more months on my San Bartolome build. ROTF I got a little side tracked by a Xmas gift ROTF

Jan
 
Hello from the (currently frigid) Finger Lakes of New York! Home of lovely lakes, world class wines and gorgeous gorges. Ok, enough alliterative superlatives. :rolleyes:

My name is Russ. I joined the forum about four months ago and have just been lurking and reading as many posts as time permitted. I really like the community and feel I've already gotten to know many of the regular posters. I figured it was time to introduce myself and start contributing.

I've been modeling in some form or another most of my life. My mother gave me my first plastic kit at around age seven - a '50s vintage pickup/tow truck. I can't remember the exact model. She enjoyed paint-by-number kits and was somewhat dismayed when my "kit", unlike hers, didn't include everything needed to build the model. Times were tough and being frugal, she handed me a bottle of Elmers glue and some leftover pots of oil paint from one her kits.

Yeah, that went well.

Undeterred, I went on to build numerous plastic cars, planes and ships, then to model rockets, some Guillows stick & tissue airplanes (none of which would actually fly), some control-line airplanes (some of which flew), and I dabbled in RC - a couple that flew.

I purchased my first wooden ship model in 1978. A Billings Danmark on sale for $44.95. That was when they were selling the kits in two parts - hull kits and fittings kits. I just bought the hull kit because it was all I could afford, figuring I would pick up the fittings kit later. I did eventually get the hull planked and decked with most of the deck furniture installed, but by that time, the fittings kits were no longer available separately. It languished, surviving numerous moves - until one time it didn't. I miss that ship.

Without boring you with too many details, I'll mention that my career started in Information Technology in the early '80s. Getting burned out and wanting to try something different, I went to work for a furniture manufacturer in 2007 building high end wooden office furniture. In 2018, I had a slight disagreement with a sliding table saw and lost my right index finger, half of the pinkie and lost most of the range of motion of the other two fingers. Working with power tools most of your life can (will) lead to a sense of complacency. A millisecond's distraction is all it takes for disaster to strike. And yes, it was my dominant hand. I'm still at the same company, but back in an I.T. roll, keeping all the little lights blinking on the network.

When I first found out that they had to amputate the fingers, the first thing I said to the Admiral was that I was going to get a 3D printer and make myself a new finger. And so I did.

Much therapy and a lot of Lego kits to work on my dexterity, I'm now able to do most everything I did before. Sometimes it takes longer and has to be done differently, but it can be done.

I have ordered and finally received Pavel Nikitin's Oseberg V3 in 1:25 and I'll attempt to do a build log on her.

Thank you for welcoming me - I look forward to being a contributing member of this community.

Cheers,
RussF, I was just reading your introduction and thought I would reach out to you, I am in Rochester, New York. We have a ship modeling group in Rochester called the Model Shipwrights Guild of Western, New York. https://www.modelshipwrightguildwny.org/ We meet once a month with hybrid in person/zoom meetings. If you would like to make some new friends who share this passion for model boat building we would love to have you join in. Randy
 
RussF, I was just reading your introduction and thought I would reach out to you, I am in Rochester, New York. We have a ship modeling group in Rochester called the Model Shipwrights Guild of Western, New York. https://www.modelshipwrightguildwny.org/ We meet once a month with hybrid in person/zoom meetings. If you would like to make some new friends who share this passion for model boat building we would love to have you join in. Randy
Thank you for the invitation. I will seriously consider it. Pittsford is about an hour away from me, and I'm up at 4:30 to get into the office by 6, but one night a month shouldn't be too bad. The virtual presence is a great idea, but being there to examine the show-n-tell is half the fun!
 
Thank you for the invitation. I will seriously consider it. Pittsford is about an hour away from me, and I'm up at 4:30 to get into the office by 6, but one night a month shouldn't be too bad. The virtual presence is a great idea, but being there to examine the show-n-tell is half the fun!
Russ, Our first meeting of the new year will be on January 16th at 7pm. I believe that zoom link is posted on the website. If not please let me know and we can figure out how to email it to you.
 
Welcome, Russ! You live in a beautiful area! I have relatives in Elmira and Corning- and my wife is from Groton. Also have had run-in's with power tools- as you say, familiarity breeds momentary lapses in attention.
!
 
Welcome aboard from Connecticut!

The family of my best friend in Medical School had a wonderful waterfront house on Seneca lake, which we had a wonderful weekend at. Many good memories.

If I may, I have discovered that boat building has a steep learning curve. May I suggest you peruse this area of the forms.



Beginners Corner - How to Get Started
shipsofscale.com




There is also a treasure trove of videos on you tube to explore.

I usually recommend that you usually start on something much less complex. Here in the USA model expo has a shipwright series of 3 more and more complex models that are fun and give you a good foundation for your major project.


Model Shipways Shipwright Series

There are also excellent build logs of almost any ship you can think of that will help. Model Expo has an offer if you complete the Dory and send a picture of it they will give you full store credit towards your next ship. It is a great deal. Also there are many build logs of all those boats.

We are all here to help each other. I doubt I would have gotten this far without the input of the rest of the crew!

Rob
 
Like you I am a relatively new member. I only have one post to my name but it's a good place to interact with other modelers. Welcome aboard.
 
Welcome, Russ! You live in a beautiful area! I have relatives in Elmira and Corning- and my wife is from Groton. Also have had run-in's with power tools- as you say, familiarity breeds momentary lapses in attention.
!
Thank you for the welcome, @MarTay6 !

Yes, we are indeed fortunate to live here. This is the home that the Admiral's grandfather built after immigrating from Denmark. Her father inherited it and she was raised here and then was passed to her. As I mentioned in my Oseberg build log, her father was born and passed away in the exact same physical spot in this home. Not many can lay claim to that.

While there is only about 4 acres left, the property was originally quite large and was home to vineyards. The Admiral's father kept them up until the free labor (her) went to college. Then he started gradually selling off parcels. The house is small, but being just across the road from the lake, the view is stunning. Ice is beginning to form for the first time in 3 years (but remember, climate change is a hoax), so the ice fishing tents will start to spring up soon.

As for the accident, in life, you have to play the "hand" you are dealt. ;) I'm not ashamed to admit that during the first month, there were numerous uncontrollable sobbing sessions, usually alone in the shower, but I never gave in to depression and persevered toward learning how to make the best of what I had left. While I won't ever finger-pick Classical Gas on the guitar again, I can still use a thumb pick and strum. So just remember, lemons? Lemonade!
 
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