For the capstan base, I got to play with a new toy, the Proxxon Dividing Attachment. After reading several build logs where this tool was used to great effect, I overcame my reluctance to spend money on additional tools as I expect this model (of this complexity) to be my last. I will be in my eighties by the time I’m done. Even though I don’t have a true drill press, let alone a milling machine, I do have the Proxxon X-Y table which the divider is designed to fit. In the past, I’ve been able to jerry rig my Dremel drill stand and rotary tool to emulate a drill press... mostly.
Once more, if you look at the actual capstan, its base does not look like the practicum’s capstan due to the real one’s complexity. I thought I would try to make something that
suggested the look of the real one. I decided to just cut a trough around the base where the ratchet mechanism tracked. Trying to add the gear teeth and the rachets was too much, too small, and would not be seen as everything is colored black. The hard part for me was setting the vertical height of the router bit. There aren’t any fine vertical adjustment controls for the Dremel drill stand. Using a piece of actual USS Constitution oak wood leftover from when I used it on the model’s keel, I drilled a ¼” hole in it, inserted a dowel, and mounted it into the divider. It was used just because it happened to be the right size. After a couple of false starts, I got the divider to cut a circular trough. The outside wall ended up being very thin and fragile, which I reinforced with CA glue. Some unintended holes were patched with sawdust and CA glue. The base was then painted black. Once everything was coated with polyurethane and dried, it was installed.
