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- Jun 28, 2020
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I traced down the side view and floor plan on two sheets of cinnabar veneer (420mm x 910mm, 4mm thick). This is a good way to get rid of paper drawings even if they are torn.
This is the usual tracing down of printed out drawings using carbon paper.
From now on, this drawing will be used as the basis for the hull construction. The green vertical lines are the positions of the frames.
I will also draw the vertical lines for the gun ports later.
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Gun port position vertical line
Use the spring divider to draw a red line around the gun port vertical line on the plan.
his is the mid-car spring divider.
I finished drawing the gun port lines and took some pictures, but they weren't very good.
I took apart the keel, frame, and frame support plates that had been temporarily assembled.
This is the preparation for the full-scale assembly.
I used five square wood blocks in the red arrow part of the photo to assemble the side view and plan view in an L-shape.
In my case, I need this drawing table when I assemble the hull.
After assembling the keel and frame of the hull, and gluing the filler, I put up the outer panels, and used my own scribing tool to pick up the positions of the gun ports from the drawing, and transfer the positions to the hull.
This is also used to position the outfitting on the hull.
There are a lot of lines in the drawing, but I don't name them "lines of what" because I just need to know what they are, so I don't think anyone else will be able to tell.
Now we are ready for assembly.
Gluing the frames together
Glue some frames to the keel and assemble the frame support plates. The frame support plates are not glued. When the glue on the frames is dry, remove the frame support plates, glue the next few frames, assemble the frame support plates, and repeat this several times to glue the frames to the keel.
This is a photo of the frames waiting for the glue to dry.
The bow side frame...
Here is the stern side frame...
Playing with the hull frame upside down: ......
I forgot to take a picture. I used a triangular ruler to make sure the frame was perpendicular to the keel as I glued it together.
The hull frame is almost finished.
The only thing left to do is to glue the five or six frames at the stern.
This took quite a bit of time.
There are so many frames. I can't help it.
Gluing of the frames on the stern side is complete.
The next step is to fill in the bottom side from the draft line with filler.
There's still a long way to go.
I wonder how many years it will take? At any rate, as usual, I'm going to leave the parts I don't understand as they are, and just start off.
As for the outfitting, as usual, I'll make drawings and build them according to the process at that time. (;^ω^)b
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I wonder how close I can get to the above design as a model.
As a hobby, model making is a mixture of pain and pleasure.
I don't know if I can manage with my skills...? (´・ω・`)b
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