Cathber, merci pour vos aimables paroles. Je n'avais pas compris les détails concernant les canal des aiguillères dans les cadres. Maintenant que vous les mentionnez, je pourrais couper les chaînes lorsque je sortirai La Renommee de son gabarit. Je prévois de plancher le côté bâbord, mais de laisser le côté tribord non planté avec quelques cadres coupés pour montrer l'intérieur. Ce serait un joli détail à montrer sur les cadres exposés. Je ne clouerai pas les cadres car j'ai peur que le détail ne se perde dans le modèle fini.
Cathber, thanks for your kind words. I hadn’t picked up the details regarding eel channels in the frames. Now that you mention them, I might cut channels when I take La Renommee out of her jig. I plan to plank the port side, but leave the starboard side unplanked with some frames cut away to show the interior. It would be a nice detail to show on the exposed frames. I won’t nail the frames as I fear the detail will just be lost in the finished model.
Here are frames 1 to 7:
The ragged bits at the bottom will eventually be trimmed so there is a lip of only a couple of millimetres. I am leaving them as is for the present as they will help line the frames up on the keel.
Some of the wood in these frames was a little difficult to work as it contained what I would call resin lines:
I am not complaining. Quite the opposite, as wood is a natural material and will inevitably have imperfections. If I wanted completely uniform modelling material, I’d been building plastic planes and cars…
Just below the top joint on the the right hand side of the frame, is a section where you can see some end grain. There is an area like this on every frame. It’s quite difficult to get a nice finish on this as well as the sections around it where you work more with the grain. The scraper certainly helps improve matters, but I still have to be careful nonetheless. It’s easy to dig it in and get chatter marks when passing over joints and around curves.
Here are frames 1 to 14 together:
Kind regards
Salty