Beautiful work Sergey.
Bill
Bill
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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. |
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I know that feeling.I will not build my alert![]()
Friends, thank you all for your activity and likes!
Thank you all for the kind comments:
@dockattner @Peter Voogt @Corsair @GrantTyler @GIG1810 @RichardG @Bill-R @Chris B
It's a pleasure reading you, and it's motivating. Sorry I don't write to you often (translation difficulties, English isn't my native language), but I'm constantly following your updates and am thrilled by your progress!
Today I finished one side and am happy to share my progress with you:
The most difficult place, as I expected, is the connection of the second and 4th parts of the waterway through the 3rd part.
View attachment 559750
And at the same time, we still need to put up the last board...
View attachment 559751
But the principle is the same here. I cut out the second and fourth pieces and then scratch their profile onto the third piece. Then I cut out the board and scratch its profile onto the third waterway:
View attachment 559752
In the end, everything comes together, the main thing is to do it with a blade and not a pencil and adjust the filings with a file.
View attachment 559753
Now on one side everything is ready:
View attachment 559754
And now a couple of macro photos: the connection of the 1st and 2nd parts of the waterway:
View attachment 559755
... 2nd and 3rd:
View attachment 559756
... and 3rd and 4th:
View attachment 559757
Well, and the final one:
View attachment 559758
On the other hand, things will most likely go faster, since all the calculations have already been done, you just need to mirror them.
I'll show you when I've sanded the entire surface.
Come on, I've seen your work, it's amazing. We have a saying: the eyes are afraid, but the hands are doing it.I will not build my alert![]()
When I look at the works of Shevelev or Bezverkhny or Epur and Paddon, I also feel sad, but then I understand that their work is motivation and I roll up my sleeves and shave left and right.I know that feeling.![]()

If only you knew how much effort it took me to find the right pear. And how many samples and preparations I made, almost all of which ended up in the trash... but I'm glad my time wasn't wasted and you like the result.Well thought out technique, and great result. Excellent material as well. The grain size is just right.
Hey Sergey,
And I thought you were a machine that never makes mistakes!![]()
To me, your mistake with the water walk isn't a mistake at all... It looks wonderful!
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It took little time and it put my mind at ease because now I like the way it looks.

Yes, this area will be trimmed after sanding, as the edges of the boards will be rounded during sanding. To ensure a 90-degree angle, I'll trim off the excess after sanding. Where the exclamation mark appears, I'll be attaching a temporary waterwall around the perimeter. This will also serve as an extension of the sanding surface, and it will also be rounded. I'll remove it later and install a real waterwall that will fit snugly against the deck boards. I'll explain this in more detail later.Yes, I agree Sergey, it looks much better. When you first mentioned it, I thought you meant this area:
View attachment 559797
I assumed that all the planks were long and that you would be trimming them all together, so I could not see why that mattered ... but now I see what you meant. The repair was worth it.



The only thing I've decided for sure is that the stand will be at an angle and parallel to the keel, and the columns that hold the model will be perpendicular to the keel, not the horizon.


