Rattlesnake by MS

Finished with deck planking on the gun deck. Got the port side railing installed with some more work needed where it meshes with the forecastle.

False deck for the poop is cut with some slight trimming to be done. The major obstacles are cutting the hole for the ladder way to the captain's quarters and for the aft mast. Ain't no pre cut holes as in a kit.

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I am really having difficulty with the "reference line." I don't know we where to measure from. I also reinforced the part that broke and the main connection point. May have made a mistake.View attachment 123249View attachment 123249

Thank you. Ordered the CD.


So John B. The reference line doesn't have anything to do with the eventual gun ports. The reference line is so you can line up each bulkhead properly. If the bulkheads are lined up properly, fairing the hull becomes easier and it lessens the need for building up the edge of this bulkhead OR having to do excessive sanding on the edge of that bulkhead.

Just look at the plans and take a measurement down from the top of each bulkhead and notice how far down the reference mark is, then put that mark on the corresponding bulkhead. Do that for each bulkhead. When you place and glue each bulkhead have the reference lines line up.

On some kits the reference line is pre-printed on each bulkhead. Not so on Rattlesnake.
 
So John B. The reference line doesn't have anything to do with the eventual gun ports. The reference line is so you can line up each bulkhead properly. If the bulkheads are lined up properly, fairing the hull becomes easier and it lessens the need for building up the edge of this bulkhead OR having to do excessive sanding on the edge of that bulkhead.

Just look at the plans and take a measurement down from the top of each bulkhead and notice how far down the reference mark is, then put that mark on the corresponding bulkhead. Do that for each bulkhead. When you place and glue each bulkhead have the reference lines line up.

On some kits the reference line is pre-printed on each bulkhead. Not so on Rattlesnake.
Thank you.
 
Yeah boy the keel on Rattlesnake is so narrow. To get a good rabbit you need to chisel down a bunch. I ended up sinking small nails every 3-4 inches along the entire keel, through the keel into that center bulkhead. My other build Syren had an even wider keel and when I was completely done with the planking and I thought the structure strong enough...well, it wasn't. Broke the entire keel off and had to do some serious repair work. I learned my lesson. But you don't HAVE to do that, but when you have your finished hull in whatever device you use to hold the ship in place just don't put too much side load on it.
 
This information is very helpful. I still need to figure how to get the bearding line transferred to the keel piece. I know the a critical step.
 
Just leave about 2.0-2.5mm of meat on the side of the keel starting from the extreme bottom, uniformly from bow to stern. Bevel down with your chisel taking out about 1/3 of the wood on each side of the center bulkhead down to where you're leaving the "meat". That leaves about 1/3 of the material of the center bulkhead down there at the rabbit. No need to be pretty about it, rough is good enough.
 
Forecastle false deck shaping up. Notice the distinct curve....I did not make the lower rail extend back far enough. I thought about it and rather than ripping the rails off and doing it again I decided to make the forecastle decking curved to accommodate the foremast. I have not the foggiest notion whether this geometry was genuine or not, but I can see it in my head and I like it. After laying down the deck planks (same teak strips) I'll also place some scratch built pillar supports. There are no supports shown on the plans but I just can't believe with a span of some 30' on the actual ship that there were no pillar supports to hold up the ceiling beams.

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Finished up with planking below the poop deck and creating the holes in the false deck for the passageway, mizzen mast, and rudder stem. I figured there will be an extremely small chance of getting a view of the mizzen below decks so I scratched up a mast coat. The kit only included three laser cut mast coats and along with the fore mast both above and below the forecastle I'll need a total of five.

After I glued on the false deck for the poop I realized too late that it would have been much much easier to feed through the lanyards for the gun port covers had I not yet glued on the false deck. Oh well, I'll cross that bridge when I get to it.

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Couple of questions, did you use the kit gun port covers, and where did you get the gun port frames?

I constructed the gun port covers from scratch. The hinges are copper. The gun port frames are also after market. After looking at the close up picture I'm going to remove these two and redo them. The black paint is just too globby. I think ebony stain for the wood and liver of sulfur to blacken the hinges.

Let me look up where I got the gun port frames, I'll get back to you fire dog.
 
Fire dog the port frames are from model-dockyard.com; Amati fittings.
 

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Thanks, I was looking to add them to mine, I have seen post with them and without I am also looking for new buckets the ones in my kit were crap

What I like most about the gun port frames is it negates the need to make the gun ports exactly square. The 8×8 frames fit perfectly in the gun ports for Rattlesnake.

I thought so too about those cast "buckets". The model dockyard has plenty of buckets as well. And scratch building the frame for the buckets is the way to go.
 
OK. So, I got a wild hair and decided to put some more detail in...if possible. I'm not smashing this kit but I figure an extra detail here or there might just be a good thing despite all the extra time it takes. There are three sheaves on each side of the hull to accommodate the sheets. On my Bounty it was just a hole drilled through the hull, on Syren it is a simulated sheave with the rope shoved in from the outside into a halfway drilled hole, and another halfway drilled hole on the inside of the hull lashed to a cleat. Both look just fine, even viewing the effects with a magnifying glass.

On Rattlesnake I purchased some mini pulleys. And then....I cut a hole in both sides of the hull, eeeeeeeekkkkk! So far so good but this one sheave took almost two hours to get the rectangular openings the right size and shape. I might just do the one sheave on either side port and starboard then go with simulated sheaves for the remaining four, don't know yet. But so far so good.

One thing for sure though, I am going to construct the eight chesstrees and kevels with the smaller pulleys. Those will definetely be seen with our without magnification.

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