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ENDURANCE (Occre kit)

Several Arctic research ships were converted bomb vessels, which had a huge amount of internal bracing. The HMS Terror and Erebus come to mind. I'm not sure even that bracing was enough under the most extreme conditions.
My Friend Mike is building from Scratch the SS BEAR, designed for Artic and Antarctic travels. We chat about the difference and why the Endurance have collapsed and the Bear didn't.

Here are some why's:

Based on recent technical analysis, the SS Bear was arguably better designed for the specific, intense, and sustained compressive ice loads that doomed the Endurance. While Endurance was a massively strong, modern wooden vessel, it was designed more for navigation at the ice’s edge rather than enduring long-term entrapment in heavy, moving pack ice.

Comparison of Design and Performance

SS Bear (Built 1874): Built in Scotland as a sealer, it featured exceptionally thick wooden planking (roughly 6 inches or more) and was engineered to push through thick ice packs. Its long service life in both Arctic and Antarctic, including the 1887 overland rescue, demonstrated immense durability against heavy pressure.

Endurance (Built 1912): Although built in the same era as other polar ships, recent studies show Endurance had structural deficiencies, such as weaker deck beams and oak/pine frames, compared to counterparts like Fram or Discovery. Crucially, it lacked the diagonal internal support beams needed to withstand the "squeeze" of the Weddell Sea pack ice.

The "Crush" Factor: While Endurance was intended to be "the strongest wooden ship," its design—originally for Arctic tourism and light sealing—was ill-suited for the immense lateral compressive forces of the Antarctic, according to a 2025 analysis.

Screenshot_20260514_133011_Google.jpg
 
I was wondering whether Mike is continuing the Bear; it's good to know that he is well and is still building. On those motorcycles of his, he is certainly not leading a "protected" life. ROTF

As to the Endurance; she is looking great my friend. That is one seriously authentic-looking hull that you have there. I can't wait to see what else you are going to surprise us with.
 
I was wondering whether Mike is continuing the Bear; it's good to know that he is well and is still building. On those motorcycles of his, he is certainly not leading a "protected" life. ROTF

As to the Endurance; she is looking great my friend. That is one seriously authentic-looking hull that you have there. I can't wait to see what else you are going to surprise us with.

Thank you Heinrich!!! Don't let your expectations go too high that you can be disappointed... HAHAHA

Cheers
Daniel
 
Hi all

On my free time, since my last posting, I was able to built the rudder steering system similar to the original. The kit calls to built a kind off shed covering all this, a non-existent situation.

So I tried to my best to built the original steering system. It isn't finished yet. Waiting for a 1mm chain from Amazon.

I used 1.5 mm brass tube for the legs, 1.5 mm brass rod for the wheel axis an a 1.5 mm flat copper wire for the round section after the wheel. All can be seen on the images.

Moreover, I added 2 images showing the ship building status.

This is what the kit comes with to be built:
20260602_165441.jpg

This is an original image of the Endurance and you can see that the shed doesn't exist.

Endurance2.png

This is the original rudder steering system

file_000000007a00722fa921c8f80c641c99.png

So far... this is what I have done

20260602_163251.jpg20260602_163333.jpg20260602_163448.jpg20260602_163524.jpg20260602_163657(0).jpg20260602_164253.jpg

Cheers
Daniel
 
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Interesting. The Photos & Model shipyards model show the the forward deadeyes on a sideboard and the more realistic steering mechanism than the current Occre model
As i told you before, that i wasn't sure what i will do, well, on my previous posting is your answer concerning the steering system. Still a lot to be done.

Best
 Daniel
 
Just a question - I note you said you would glue the rudder. Does this mean your steering mechanism is a static part of the model. I say this because - if it works, it is the best steering build I have seen and certainly puts mine to shame
 
Just a question - I note you said you would glue the rudder. Does this mean your steering mechanism is a static part of the model. I say this because - if it works, it is the best steering build I have seen and certainly puts mine to shame
Yes, this kit needs several modifications to make the rudder workable and I decided not to go that route. Rudder is already glued and the steering system will be static too.
I have seen yours steering system and is fine. My built was very easy, just using what I showed in the image, using stuff that I had around. For the legs I flattened the tips of the 1.5mm brass tube, then flattened the middle and bend it. And the round part after the wheel is a piece of wood with flat 1.5 mm copper wire glued around it.

Best
Daniel
 
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