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Staghound...Extreme clipper 1850 by rwiederrich 1/96

I should have said Capstan instead of windless. I only want the capstan part on the deck but below deck is inaccessible now. By the way, would a light gray stain on the weather deck look any good? I think I should color the deck some how and not just leave it a bass wood color. Thanks for posting the picture. That machine must be seven feet tall from the floor to the bottom of the capstan. Quite a nice piece of machinery. Maybe some one makesa kit of it. Pete
The Emerson patent capstan/windless...fit perfectly under the 7.5 to 8 ft tween decks space. I would think some sort of grey weathered wood tone would do nicely on the exposed weather deck.

Rob
 
Yes, it is true. many ships undergo extensive alterations and modification to their original design and function. This fact provides modelers of said vessels with a cornucopia of options and dates to model their vessel. I have such experience, when my crew and I spent 3 years researching Glory of the Seas with the author Michael Mjelde. One model builder was suited to build Glory of the Seas as Donald McKay had originally designed her, and I chose to go the extra mile and build her at the peak of her career, when she had undergone extensive modifications in Deck structures and rigging. In essence, we were both accurately representing her during our specific time frames....though she looked strikingly different. Separated by nearly 17 years.
However, Staghound, had neither fore or aft cabins as Revell erroneously depicts at any time in her career. Her entrance and cutwater were less rounded as was her later sister Flying Cloud. She was also a bit sharper in entrance and deadrise.

Thanks for following.

Rob
Again, I apologize for having taken so long to respond but I am dealing with a fresh health issues. I have since broken 7 ribs due to a fall on concrete. It has slowed me down but I am hanging in there.

I used to discuss the issue of kit accuracy with John Tilley before he passed away, having had the opportunity to meet both his wife and he at Mystic Seaport. We often discussed the many problems with the ways that Revell in particular based some of their sailing ship kits inappropriately based some kits on other ships. You mentioned that the Staghound was based on the Flying Cloud kit. Simarly, look at how the 1/96 kit of Thermopylae was based on Cutty Sark even though they had little in common. The same is true of the HMAV Bounty and their kit of Beagle, or CSS Alabama and USS Kearsarge. Even Revell takes short cuts!
 
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