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Le Saint Philippe 1693 after Jean-Claude Lemineur (Ancre) in scale 1:48

Now back from our winter trip... work continued on the first deck...

Since I now had the beams fitted I could fabricate the beam knees. I ended up making cardstock patterns and roughly cut out paired knees. Obviously, these will need to be further refined before installation.

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I then laid out the various cutouts on the beams themselves:

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Since I'll be doing quite a lot of milling, I fabricated a jig to make that work reproducible and efficient:

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Thank you for stopping by!
Making cardstock patterns, using a jig for milling for productive and efficient work, making nice overview pictures ……. You made some very nice progress with this build, Paul. With a beautiful outcome on those beam with nicely aligned notches.
Regards, Peter
 
The jig is a great way to cut mortises perpendicular to the curve of the beams!

Stocking that one away in the memory bank!

She is looking awesome!!

Glad to see you back at it after a relaxing vacation...now bracing for snow!
Thanks, Brad. I'm not sure how the professionals cut the mortices on the beams - but this is my current best solution....
 
Simple, yet effective — bravo, mon ami! I’ve always said the best tools are the ones that work and give results, not the ones that merely shine on the shelf as collectibles.
If I had more confidence I would probably use these tools more frequently. I will say my little clamping jig made the set-up for each cut very simple.
 
Making cardstock patterns, using a jig for milling for productive and efficient work, making nice overview pictures ……. You made some very nice progress with this build, Paul. With a beautiful outcome on those beam with nicely aligned notches.
Regards, Peter
Thanks, Peter. The French certainly did not make things easy for themselves with this deck structure. Lot's more work to do!
 
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