Black Pearl - Zhl 1:50 by Vfordyce [COMPLETED BUILD]

I am already not looking forward to doing these when I get there sometime in the far future.
They turned out better than I thought. I was going to paint them instead of tung oil. That way I could putty and sand. The recipient wants wood finish so I sanded the heck out of them , made some sawdust and glue putty and sanded again. Then the tung oil. It turned out okay.
 
I haven’t seen much on stropping deadeyes and attaching chainplates in the forum. This is a step-by-step on building them on the ZHL all-version Black Pearl. At least this is the way I did it—no promises on whether it’s the best way.

First, I got out a deadeye and a long brass eyebolt supplied in the kit. D7149092-F023-43AC-9A3C-BF6C7321D229.jpeg
Then, I bend the eyebolt around the deadeye, leaving enough room at the neck of the eyebolt to fit comfortably into the channel. 1296C871-B7AA-47D2-A1C5-4348B16445D6.jpeg
Then I twist the tail end of the eyebolt around its neck and cut off the excess.
DC9D66E9-8449-4A75-940B-967C85BAED1C.jpegD675D88F-D2B4-4F53-B336-0309EB065AD7.jpeg
Next, it’s time to cut off the chainplate and drill it to make the holes a tad bigger so my drill can go through them and into the hull. I drill the holes in the chainplate first before attaching it to the deadeye. If you do it after, the drill can catch and buckle it. Be sure to hold the chainplate down tight. DDA42077-4F89-426F-B4C5-CBA3038A097D.jpeg1F31210C-691B-4646-815E-F59712AD9591.jpeg7CC327F1-9385-4A65-9087-2F4F9F129762.jpeg
Now open the deadeye a bit and hook to the chainplate before closing it up again. B11717C1-3095-43B7-A6D3-BD40BE5ED41C.jpegBend the end of the chainplate to fit the hull and glue in place in the channel.
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I think I’ll wait to nail the chainplate down until i rig my shrouds to make them more in line.
 

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Vic, looks like you have a lot of neat stuff to work on with this build. Looks like fun.
 
It’s time to do the mast thing. I saw in Sea Burd’s post a discussion between him and Darivs Architectvs about wooldings—wrapped rope around the mast to make it stronger. I’ve see several logs of ships sporting them. Darivs copied a page from RC Anderson’s The Rigging of Ships in the Days of the Spritsail Topmast. 6E610AE9-6289-4F49-832E-6C240A69B47A.jpegFBD38047-16D4-40FA-AA2D-44748B0259CA.jpeg
I think I’ll try some wooldings.
 
It’s time to do the mast thing. I saw in Sea Burd’s post a discussion between him and Darivs Architectvs about wooldings—wrapped rope around the mast to make it stronger. I’ve see several logs of ships sporting them. Darivs copied a page from RC Anderson’s The Rigging of Ships in the Days of the Spritsail Topmast. View attachment 204863View attachment 204864
I think I’ll try some wooldings.
Wooldings- one of the few things that were easy to do for me.
 
What is the purpose of this wrapping (sorry if that's a silly question - I'm new to this ship model thing)?
Quick reply, Paul--according to other sources, wooldings help give strength to various spars to include yards and masts. Otherwise, you might shiver me timbers with a strong wind, great white whale, or whatever.
 
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