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The Great Republic 1:48

Nails attaching copper or muntz metal sheathing were actually tacks with large flat heads. They would be invisible at most model scale viewing distances. In your case looking at the model from a distance of 1ft would be equivalent to looking at the real ship from a distance of 48Ft.

The heavily embossed copper plates furnished with model kits are grossly out-of-scale marketing gimmicks.

Roger
 
Hi Roger and thanks for the comment. I got a bag of coppers for the Cutty Sark that came with the model but there's no way I'm gonna try and put each one of those little copper plates on that model. I may use a few on the GR keel and the CS keel but that's it. Man, I sure am having fun now. Pete
 
Good morning. I went back to the start of your log again. Apologies for all the likes. A very cool log to read and so much information in it. Well done on building an amazing clipper so far. Cheers Grant
 
Not that it's much help to you now, but faced with a large models copper bottom, and not wanting it to look riveted on; I got 1/2" 2mil "outdoor peel&stick" unvarnished copper tape from and electrical supply because finding the width I wanted was difficult from modeling suppliers, and it cost almost half as much as the model shops charged.
I put the nail pattern in a piece of aluminum sheet to match a hole-punching pattern I saw in a museum for pre-punching the real thing.
I pressed the bumps into the face of the copper tape, making indents. When the tape is applied, the indents are pushed back out giving a good impression of the flat headed nails used.
Putting some 2000 1-1/2" x 1/2" copper sheets on the hull was a tedious job; I did half the hull and worked on making the mast tops until my fingers healed, then did the other half.
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For my next coppered model, instead of copper, I'll use aluminum duct tape and paint it with copper spray paint. A roll large enough to do 4 or more Constellation sized models cost $20 (in 2010) where it was almost $40 for 3 rolls of the copper tape I used.
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Hi Grant and thanks for your comment too. Almost two years ago I discovered the SOS post from Richard Dunn and the large scale models he builds for testing etc. When I saw his models and one of the Cutty Sark I decided that if I was ever to build this large model of the Great Republic, I'd better do it now at 81 if i was to actually finish it while I was a tenant on this earth. I still don't know if it will get finished but I am sure that I should have built it ten years ago when I first discovered the plans. I keep going with it because I find myself doing things on the model that I never even imagined I could do. So it's a learning curve that never stops and I'm really enjoying it a lot. Thanks again for you nice words. Pete
 
Wow, Jerry. That's huge and now I can see what it's like to attach all those tiny copper plates. I didn't think I could do such a tedious thing so I didn't. However your ship looks so realistic I would rethink the process on another model. Your's looks fantastic. and the copper looks thicker than mine too. The foil is not easy to deal with for this application. Nice work Jerry and keep posting. I would like to see how you do with the rigging too. Pete
 
Wow, Jerry. That's huge and now I can see what it's like to attach all those tiny copper plates. I didn't think I could do such a tedious thing so I didn't. However your ship looks so realistic I would rethink the process on another model. Your's looks fantastic. and the copper looks thicker than mine too. The foil is not easy to deal with for this application. Nice work Jerry and keep posting. I would like to see how you do with the rigging too. Pete
My hull's just 5 foot (154cm), 8 foot with bowsprit and boom, so you've got a couple of feet on me.
I hunted down Dunn's project that you mentioned inspired you into this, and it's pretty awe inspiring, though it's a shame it's not RC. ;)
 
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