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Golden Hind 1/72 by Aifix with added rigging and details

I had a lot of trouble getting the gallery to fit!
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Each edge is bevelled and even an octopus wouold have trouble holding the 6 pieces on the ship so that a test fit can be done. I tried using liquitape but with limited success. Anyway, I eventually got it looking OK and then adjusted the last two pieces to fit. Then there were some gaps because the floor is flat and the gallery is actually curved. So it was CA glue as filler, sanding to fit, painting, checking, adding some more glue, sanding to level railings, repaint...ugh. Then I had to add wood effects on the inside as well. It basically took me a week. But I think it is acceptable now.
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Work on the anchors progresses.

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Bolts being added using Pro Acryl Dark Silver thick contour paint (thanks for the tip, Kirill!)

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Also working on the anchor buoys... Currently being painted. More soon.
 
Free comment ;)
We discussed this once on the Dutch forum. Conclusion:
given that you can only hoist one anchor at a time, you only need one.
But if you want to add two, no problem.
Yes, I have been reading about fishes and cats! I only need one, for this time period, and stowed on the deck. And a spanshackle. I am keen to make a spanshackle! I love the word ;-)
 
Cats and Fishes. Sigh.

OK. I think I know what I am going to do for my GH. I will discuss that inmy next post. But my discussions with various people have really made me wonder exactly HOW these heavy anchors were moved around safely. By safely, I mean without damaging the ship. I assume that "damaging" a sailor was not considered as seriously!

I understand the principle. Consider weighing anchor (and dropping is just reversing this). We pull the anchor up by the anchor cable.

Once it breaks the surface a hook is attached to the anchor ring. The hook is on the cat block and the cat head is used to raise the anchor out of the water, and up to the cat head. So far so good. There is a famous picture of this happening in the Sovereign of the Seas:
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Now, to turn the anchor horizontal for storage we use a fish davit, which is a beam that has a tackle at the end. It is hooked onto the flukes of the anchor and then this line raises the anchor to become horizontal. It is then tied into place with various lines. I am reasonably happy with that. In principle.

There is a nice video here showing this process on a model. (It is more modern ship than the GH but I am more interested in the principle, at the moment!)
Here is a still showing how this works. Note that in this ship there is a single davit which is moved from side to side, according to which anchor is being worked. There are two spanshackles on the deck, slightly to either side fo the centre line. Each is used to hold the davit in place when it is working on the anchor on the opposite side to the spanshackle. eg this is how to raise the anchor into the yellow position, on the channel.
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But there is also an anchor forward of the channels - and this is the one used mostly if I have understood correctly. I have drawn that one in red. The davit in the picture above is in a good position for storing an anchor on the channel but not for storing an anchor forward of the channel. eg the red anchor. That seems to require a davit inthe position as shown in red?

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Indeed I notice that the davit has a support on the side rails...and indeed there are four! And they are in about the postions required according to my diagrams
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So in short it seems to me that we need two davits on each side?

When there was one movable davit, that is fine. But later ships had one davit fixed in postion, but it extended over both sides of the ship. Still, it is locked in ONE position...

I was told by a real sailing ship master: "The davits can be moved and tackles rigged from under the tops through runner pendants." So that seems to support moving the davits when you want to access the four different anchors.

If true, the the angle of the spanshackles needs to change as the davit moves from the position for the yellow anchor to the postion for the red anchor.

Do the spanshackles rotate?

Any explanation will be greatly appreciated!
 
To decide what I am going to do for the GH requires some thought about what exactly I am doing :-) Ships at sea for lengthy periods had anchor ropes removed and stowed since they were not expecting to use the anchor for some time.

So...the deep philosophical question...what are we displaying, and perhaps why?

Most models show ships with anchors stowed but ready to use. I toyed with doing one side like that, and the other side with an anchor half lowered, perhaps catted with the davit in position ready to use.

But I have decided to show the anchors stored, with a spanshackle in the centre and the fish davit rigged and ready, but secured under the railings on the forecastle (if it fits).
 
Indeed I notice that the davit has a support on the side rails...and indeed there are four! And they are in about the postions required according to my diagrams
View attachment 613385

So in short it seems to me that we need two davits on each side?
There are only two davit supports. The ones marked in red are cathead-stopper blocks, used to fix the anchor when it is pulled to the cathead. You will make them unusable or break, if you put a davit on them. Take a look at this thread for details: https://shipsofscale.com/sosforums/threads/help-with-rigging-anchor-on-18th-century-yacht.11100/

And in this video there is only one davit, being put to starboard or to port side depending on which side the anchor is being taken to the fish. Because as it was mentioned before, you can operate only one anchor at a time, using the capstain and the crew. If you have two, you will need to do the job on one side, then on another.

And honestly I think on such old & small ships like GH they used an approach without the davit at all, like on this drawing from Markvardt, pic 1017 (1018 is for a davit), for smaller ships it was used even in XVIII century:
Anchor stuff.png
 
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Many thanks boatman! I was not sure what a stopper was but I think I get it now.

I still don't understand how the cathead and davit can be used to get the second anchor stowed on the channel...how is it moved laterally along the side of the ship? I can see how it gets the main anchor up and down, but the one on the channel (in red below) is some distance away...
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