Beautiful work as always, Ohla.
I'm upgrading her to the version commanded by Horatio Nelson (1784-1787)What year is Boreas being depicted?
Thanks
This model is an overall masterpiece to me, not perfect tough. Anyone observed the different height of the two facilities' stern windows?
Ciao Albertothis model is an overall masterpiece to me, not perfect tough. Anyone observed the different eight of the two facilities' stern windows?
The Pandora model is gorgeous. One oddity is that there are no lodging knees for the deck beams, only hanging knees which is contradictory to the drawings of Pandora in the AOTS series book on her by Kay and Coleman and other ships' contemporary deck plans that show the ledges, carlings, and knees. Scantlings for lodging knees and hanging knees are given in both Steel's The Elements and Practice of Naval Architecture and The Shipbuilder's Repository. According to Peter Goodwin the lodging knees were used to "lodge" the beams longitudinally preventing movement fore and aft, especially in heavy seas. How would this movement be prevented if the beams were kneed as in the model in the above photo? Did McKay get it wrong and Pandora was different than other ships?
Allan
I don't know guys... I think I see lodging knees partly covered by a waterway (?).I find it interesting that there are pairs of hanging knees, one on each side of each beam, instead of a lodging knee on one side and a hanging knee on the other. Why would you need TWO hanging knees?
I find it interesting that there are pairs of hanging knees, one on each side of each beam, instead of a lodging knee on one side and a hanging knee on the other. Why would you need TWO hanging knees?
I don't know guys... I think I see lodging knees partly covered by a waterway (?).