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- May 21, 2023
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@Kurt KonrathWith those bigger lubber holes in the tops, one must watch where they step or it will be a quick decent!
Pete may have gone just a little too far in widening his lubber holes but he has the right idea. Here's another picture of actual openings of solid tops on Glory of the Seas. Modelers need to decide if they're building pretty mantlepiece decorations which make no sense or are they constructing miniature replicas of real vessels? Rob and I had a unique chance to study a real McKay clipper ship in great detail. We're sharing these true details to help improve comprehension of how these ships were actually built. Observe the long opening on the solid tops. They run from fore to aft metal bracket. The second image from directly below is one Rob shared. This confirms that real lubber hole openings went from bracket to bracket in most cases. It's of a solid top on the 1843 Whaler Charles W. Morgan fully restored in Mystic Seaport, CT. Three examples from 1789 to 1843 to 1869 are are virtually identical in treatment of lubber holes. It's simple. Commercially produced kits are wrong. Now everyone who cares to do so, has a choice to make. We hope to convince others to select authenticity so that these replicas make sense and demonstrate the true working beauty of these magnificent sailing ships.


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