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A quick note- when you have dents in your softwood, aslong as they are not super-compressed, you can raise that grain by wetting the wood then ironing it with some heat. Try it on a similar piece of scrap to see what you think....When the hull has been shaped it is time to add the stem and keel.
Before working on the keel a few words about the wood being used. Plank on frame model builders and scratch builders will select woods like Maple, Beech, Cherry, Pearwood, Boxwood and in general hardwoods. Softwood like Basswood, Cedar, Pine and softwoods are usually avoided. For one reason softwoods break easy and difficult to use clamps. As an example the picture shows what happens when you clamp a softwood like Basswood, it leaves a dent in the wood that does not come out. On the positive side softwoods are easy to cut by hand, sand and bend. Hardwood will take a nice finish softwoods do not. Softwood do not machine well and do not leave a sharp edge hardwood do. Harwoods are difficult to work with hand tools softwoods work well with hand tools.
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there are work arounds when using softwood like rather than clamp the wood taping it works just as well.
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What is going on here is building up the stem and keel leaving off the stern post that will be added later in the build. A channel is cut into the sten and keel of a ship for the gardboard plank to fit into and the ends of the planks at the stem. Rather than trying to cut the rabbit into the keel a 1/16 square strip of wood is used and it runs down the center of the stem and keel creating a channel or rabbit for the planking.
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the little sticks at the top of the stem are temporarily glued to the profile piece to center the stem. They will be removed later.
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Thanks so much, Dave for such a splendid tutorial.
Very interesting idea with the windows - and working very good with good resultnow for the stern
i tried two different way to build the stern i had the upper stern cut from a sheet of Basswood and the windows which i intended on placing them into the stern piece. Right off because i am using Basswood the piece broke off, The grain was running across the piece so the parts between the windowns were very weak. My thinking was the windows have to inset into the stern so they needed to be put in seperate.
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the next problem when i tried to remove a window from the sheet it just crumbled. Looking close around the window it is extremely thin and extremely delicate.
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Scrapping that idea i went on to a second method and that is to laser etch the windown in place and cut the molding as a seperate piece.
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The windows actually sit into the stern like this
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The windows were laser etched so i had a sharp line to work to, all i needed was a sharp Exacto knife one with a point and one with a broken point i could use to scrape with.
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The job was delicate and if i broke the window frames it would be a tough job trying to fix them. So taking small cuts at a time i worked the windows down.
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Working each window the job got done without breaking anything.
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Next comes the molding piece and that was just a matter of gluing it on the stern piece.
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as for the lower molding that was made up of three pieces two pieces of 1/16 planking and a 1/8 square piece. First the top piece was glued to the bottom of the stern piece, no need to wet the wood or force it in place, it bent easy and no problem. Same wth the square piece and the final lower piece they all bent easy. Super glue was used and each piece was held in place for 10 seconds by hand.
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with the upper stern assembled off the model it is time to finish off the stern so planking can continue.