Very, very nice Peter. Looking forward to the rigging
Thanks, Mark and Alf. The rigging will give her new ‘lines’.That's elegant!
Thanks, Tobias. Then I'll keep holding ‘the bar’ high.Very nice work, as I am used to from you.
Hi Peter. Was curious why you ordered all of these? Much better quality I'm sure and I've though of doing something similar including ordering much better ropes. Could you by chance send me your order list to my email boshaken@yahoo.com as I'd like to order these as well. I'm only on the keel right now but wanted to have these accessories all lined up ahead of time. Beautiful build btw!My ordered 1, 2, 3 sheave blocks and deadeyes, in different sizes, have (finally) arrived:
View attachment 330325
They all look beautiful. Thanks Zoltan @zoly99sask @Dry-Dock Models & Parts for the delivery. It wasn't your fault that it took so long:
July 29: ordered
July 31: they're on their way
August 9 20:22: message that they are in the Netherlands at Customs Clearances
After that .......... nothing .......... nothing ................ nothing ....... ....
September 5 12:32: whether I want to pay the customs clearance fee
September 5: paid immediately
September 5 12:55: you paid
September 6: 04:15: package has not yet been received by PostNL, delivery presumably within 6 days
After that .......... nothing .......... nothing ................ nothing ....... ....
September 16: chat with PostNL: apparently busy at Customs, expected within 6 days;
September 23 11:30: pissed off chat with PostNL: if nothing has happened for 30 days, an investigation can be started. Well: August 8 is more than 30 days. No: new installment after payment on September 5, GGGGRRRRRR
September 23, 18:08 shipment has been received by PostNL
September 23, 6:09 PM: shipment is sorted
September 24, 12:15 PM: Shipment delivered.
Gosh, what a coincidence that after the pissed off phone call, the package suddenly started moving. Customs at Schiphol Airport is therefore also a mess.
Now I can finish the hull with the deadeyes and chainplates.
Regards, Peter
Thanks Alf. Sharing ideas and techniques on this forum is satisfying. Especially if it is appreciated.This is fascinating to me. I am a "process" guy, being personally much more interested in the modeling than I am in the model (however nice) so I love your continuing documented essays.
Thanks for the post, Jo. I have send you a PM.Hi Peter. Was curious why you ordered all of these? Much better quality I'm sure and I've though of doing something similar including ordering much better ropes. Could you by chance send me your order list to my email boshaken-at-yahoo-dot-com as I'd like to order these as well. I'm only on the keel right now but wanted to have these accessories all lined up ahead of time. Beautiful build btw!
If Peter is willing to share that, we all might benefit from his research of block sizes and quantities. I've already been spending some time poring over the Lankford dwgs to compare the rigging in those with the YQ dwgs and the sketches in the back of Chapelle and The Saga. I must admit though, the published block inventories in those do overwhelm me because of my unfamiliarity with the various rope names.Hi Peter. Was curious why you ordered all of these? Much better quality I'm sure and I've though of doing something similar including ordering much better ropes. Could you by chance send me your order list to my email boshaken@yahoo.com as I'd like to order these as well. I'm only on the keel right now but wanted to have these accessories all lined up ahead of time. Beautiful build btw!
I have invited you to the PM, you are welcom, Alf.If Peter is willing to share that, we all might benefit from his research of block sizes and quantities. I've already been spending some time poring over the Lankford dwgs to compare the rigging in those with the YQ dwgs and the sketches in the back of Chapelle and The Saga. I must admit though, the published block inventories in those do overwhelm me because of my unfamiliarity with the various rope names.
HAR! Mebbe I shudda read more of POPEYE when I was a kid . . .
, if you're willing, you can add me to the list as well...I have invited you to the PM, Alf.
Regards, Peter
You are welcom, Johan. Done., if you're willing, you can add me to the list as well...
Thanks Peter!Your welcom. Done.
Uuuhhh ..... what can a say, Heinrich. You make me blush (again)......@Peter Voogt Dear Peter. My apologies for being absent so long on your log. I have addressed you in general, because if I had to comment on each posting separately, I would have spammed your log - such is your progress. Your finished hull of Bluenose is without doubt, one of the finest examples of model building I have ever seen. Each ship is obviously different - the Royal Caroline simply takes your breath away with all the carved decorations and colors, a 112-gun man-o-war may impress by the sheer enormity of the build - but Bluenose is different. You do not have carved decorations or a plethora of guns to impress - what you do have is a humble fishing schooner which happened to be lightning fast for the type and for her day. The only thing you have to work with is the very workmanlike character of the ship. To take that and turn that into art is the symbol of a master-builder - and yet that is precisely what you have done. I cannot imagine that there is a better model of Bluenose that has ever being built, not anywhere in the world, nor by whoever else. Yours is the definitive Bluenose. Period!
What a nice compliment @Heinrich. Bravo!@Peter Voogt Dear Peter. My apologies for being absent so long on your log. I have addressed you in general, because if I had to comment on each posting separately, I would have spammed your log - such is your progress. Your finished hull of Bluenose is without doubt, one of the finest examples of model building I have ever seen. Each ship is obviously different - the Royal Caroline simply takes your breath away with all the carved decorations and colors, a 112-gun man-o-war may impress by the sheer enormity of the build - but Bluenose is different. You do not have carved decorations or a plethora of guns to impress - what you do have is a humble fishing schooner which happened to be lightning fast for the type and for her day. The only thing you have to work with is the very workmanlike character of the ship. To take that and turn that into art is the symbol of a master-builder - and yet that is precisely what you have done. I cannot imagine that there is a better model of Bluenose that has ever being built, not anywhere in the world, nor by whoever else. Yours is the definitive Bluenose. Period!
Thanks, Paul.What a nice compliment @Heinrich. Bravo!