• Win a Free Custom Engraved Brass Coin!!!
    As a way to introduce our brass coins to the community, we will raffle off a free coin during the month of August. Follow link ABOVE for instructions for entering.

USS Constitution - Model Shipways

Mr. Phelps. Your mission is as follows. As usual this message will self destruct in 10 seconds after you have read it:

I have to fit the rivet into the holes(reamed with a #75 drill bit) in the chainplate assemblies then attach to the hull with another rivet. The rivet is the little brown thing at the top right and the chainplate assemblies are the two other pieces. I have to clean the solder and paint everything black. Then rince and repeat.

View attachment 540427
For how many chainplates?
 
Small update. After fiddling with the plastic rivets for a while, I decided to give up on that idea. In addition I decided to paint the deadeyes and the eyebolts black because I didn't like how they looked unpainted. This is my first attempt at soldering chainplates. It's really hard because the pieces are so small.



1756926964251.png
 

Small update. After fiddling with the plastic rivets for a while, I decided to give up on that idea. In addition I decided to paint the deadeyes and the eyebolts black because I didn't like how they looked unpainted. This is my first attempt at soldering chainplates. It's really hard because the pieces are so small.



View attachment 542061
I feel your pain.
 
Jack Sparrow - I felt the same pain. I used Testors Matte Black acrylic model paint and it was thinned already and it went on nicely and didn't clog up the holes which I thought was going to happen. The chain plates were not fun whatsoever. I used that small stand with the clips on each side to hold the deadeye with the wire and the other with the brass strip and then I positioned the tip of the brass on top wire and then put my soldering iron under the wire pulled away immediately when I melted just a touch or solder. This leaves just enough to keep everything together otherwise any longer and globs up and hard to clean up with a metal file. I also used copper wire around the deadeyes because I thought the brass wire in the kit sucked and broke too easily and kept unfolding itself. Copper was easy to solder and a great conductor and that's why I laid the brass on top of it. After you paint them, you would never know anything was improvised.
 
Jack Sparrow - I felt the same pain. I used Testors Matte Black acrylic model paint and it was thinned already and it went on nicely and didn't clog up the holes which I thought was going to happen. The chain plates were not fun whatsoever. I used that small stand with the clips on each side to hold the deadeye with the wire and the other with the brass strip and then I positioned the tip of the brass on top wire and then put my soldering iron under the wire pulled away immediately when I melted just a touch or solder. This leaves just enough to keep everything together otherwise any longer and globs up and hard to clean up with a metal file. I also used copper wire around the deadeyes because I thought the brass wire in the kit sucked and broke too easily and kept unfolding itself. Copper was easy to solder and a great conductor and that's why I laid the brass on top of it. After you paint them, you would never know anything was improvised.
Thanks for the information.

Not my favourite activity but it is required. I guess I don't mind the solder practice either. You never know when that will be handy again.
But overall it is a very challenging process. I didn't use the brass wire. Instead I used dark annealed steel wire. It twists quite well. Now that I think about it, maybe I should sand off the dark stuff on the wire. That would explain some of the difficulties that I am having.
 
Last edited:
Thanks for the information.

Not my favourite activity but it is required. I guess I don't mind the solder practice either. You never know when that will be handy again.
But overall it is a very challenging process. I didn't use the brass wire. Instead I used dark annealed steel wire. It twists quite well. Now that I think about it, maybe I should sand off the dark stuff on the wire. That would explain some of the difficulties that I am having.
Steel wire can’t be soldered unless it is zinc galvanized.
 
Steel wire can’t be soldered unless it is zinc galvanized.
I am going off a couple of references that I found on the subject. I didn't clean the steel properly but I did put a tonne of flux. I will do a mechanical cleaning in my new procedure to see if it makes a difference.

References:
 
I am going off a couple of references that I found on the subject. I didn't clean the steel properly but I did put a tonne of flux. I will do a mechanical cleaning in my new procedure to see if it makes a difference.

References:
I have a 100Watt iron at my disposal so I should be able to get enough heat on the joint.
 
Back
Top