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Hi Daniel. Luckily the gunport where the bulkhead is cut into two is a closed one. Like I did on WB#1, they will receive an inner layer of planking onto which the closed gunport lid can be glued. The gunport is 12mm high so 2 x 1.5mm x 6mm oak strakes will be planked between the two separate sections of the bulkheads. Not only will they close up the gunport but also form a connection between the two sections of the bulkheads. I will not be building any boxes as the cannons will be mounted on their carriages.,Hello Heinrich, maybe you could install horizontal knee braces on each side of the cross beam which could be glued to the bulwarks? I assume the bulkhead extensions will be cut off and you will build some sort of box to hold the canons that will be seen.
You have made a very good observation my friend! The gunports do not follow the deck line - especially at the bow and at the stern. The other issue is that the gunports sit too high in relation to the deck. I will have to add filler pieces to the bottoms of the carriages to lift them higher so that the cannons will be in the correct position (I won't even install wheels on the carriages, because they will be off the deck once the filler pieces are added to the undersides of the carriages. That is why I need to remind everyone that this kit was never intended to have cannons fitted - so everything I am doing now is scratch-building, together with all the headaches associated with it.Heinrich my friend, your gunports are looking very good right now, but did you check the height of the ports with a kanon before cutting ??
Because maiby it is because of the foto ( or my eyes ) but it looks to me that the gunports don't follow the curvature of the dek??
I hope you are right, Jan! Normally when I finish a section of work and post pictures, I am confident that it is right and look good. Tonight, there is just no way to tell if this was a good job or not. Also bear in mind that I intend to leave some gunports open for the installation of cannons, so they have to be accurate.That is exacting work. I think you are to hard on yourself because those gunport look great. I would think once the ports are covered the they will look even better.
You are building a Dutch ship. There are never accurate plans available how this ship was build. The plans of Dutch ships are al made of interpretation of archaeological findings, paintings and the imagination of professors and museums. So that makes building Dutch ships a great advantage for the builder. It doesn't have to be so perfect. On the other hand in de 2D drawing there is not to see if it is 3D because in that cage the gunport on the bow wouldn't have the same width like the other ports.What is a nice little aid on the sides of the hull, becomes evil personified around the bow
I know that only too well Stephan!You are building a Dutch ship. There are never accurate plans available how this ship was build. The plans of Dutch ships are al made of interpretation of archaeological findings, paintings and the imagination of professors and museums. So that makes building Dutch ships a great advantage for the builder. It doesn't have to be so perfect. On the other hand in de 2D drawing there is not to see if it is 3D because in that cage the gunport on the bow wouldn't have the same width like the other ports.
@Maarten great document to read.
Daniel, that is such a valid point you are making about the gunports following the deck line or the wales and not necessarily sitting perpendicular to the water line. On all three the plans that I have of the WB, the gunports are perpendicular - it may be correct, but it "looks" wrong. If you have eaten, drank and slept a ship for as long as I have the WB, and if you have studied the De Veer drawings as extensively as I did, you start getting a feel for the lines of the ship and you realize, that those are the lines that the artist tried to portray in his drawings. And that is exactly what I am trying to do with this build. When I look at the model, I want to get the same impression as when I look at De Veer's original drawings.She's looking wonderful Heinrich. You know it is interesting that a canon muzzle being round doesn't really care if the opening is square to the waterline or square to the deck only that it be relatively close to the center of the opening. For that reason, I actually prefer the look of the openings to be normal or radial along with the deck or exterior whaler.
Well,Daniel, that is such a valid point you are making about the gunports following the deck line or the wales and not necessarily sitting perpendicular to the water line. On all three the plans that I have of the WB, the gunports are perpendicular - it may be correct, but it "looks" wrong. If you have eaten, drank and slept a ship for as long as I have the WB, and if you have studied the De Veer drawings as extensively as I did, you start getting a feel for the lines of the ship and you realize, that those are the lines that the artist tried to portray in his drawings. And that is exactly what I am trying to do with this build. When I look at the model, I want to get the same impression as when I look at De Veer's original drawings.
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Een though these two drawings are different, they are also remarkably the same. The way in which the gunports are portrayed, are vastly different from how they are drawn on the plans. I do not doubt the plans for a moment - I'm just saying that I prefer the look in these two drawings! OK, now I can be officially placed in one of those long, white jackets!![]()
Very true, my friend!Well,there have certainly been times in my build that a white jacket would have been more comfortable than the seemingly impossible decisions one must make in order to keep moving ahead.
Thank you so much for the very kind words, Thomas - I really appreciate it. I am a big fan of your work, so I am very happy that you like the WB. It is interesting that you mention the book "Modellbau von Schiffen des 16./17.Jahr Hunderts" compiled by Rolf Hoeckel - some people swear by it, others, like Ab Hoving, swear at it! I do, however, agree with the view that the gunports are slightly rectangular - in the end, I went for a 12mm high x 10mm wide configuration and just "eyeballed" the final shape!View attachment 325634
Dear Heinrich!
According to Rolf Hoeckel, the distance between the gun ports was 25 times the bullet diameter. The length of the gun port was about 6 and the height 6,5 bullet diameter. Details of the frame plan with exact positions of the gun ports do not exit, of course. If the frames were exactly (?) vertical , the gun ports still look slightly slanted when viewed from the side due to the bending of the frames.
I like the model very much and it looks splendid.
Best regards
Thomas
Thank you very much, Paul - it is much appreciated!As always, Heinrich, looking good.
Thank you, Peter! I am trying my best!She is looking great my friend. Excellent work