Originally posted by \
Artesania Latina 1/50 - Dallas Revenue Cutter New York 1815
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i used danish oil and beeswax on the hull of my hms supply which gives it a nice colour and protects the wood its a personal thing others may use varnish i just went with what pleased me as i did'nt want to paint the hull, also you may know this tip but i use a double sided tape to coil the ropes and then a wash of pva glue to fix it when dry just peel the coil off the tape
cheers steveComment
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@steve244: I took your advice and used oils. I put Finishing Oil on and the result is outstanding. Wood colour is much deeper and more attractive. I oiled not only the hull, but the deck and all furnishings on the deck too.
In the meantime I've been working on the deck house and pumps.
Next is the rudder and t-bits. After that is just masting and riggings
It looks a bit yellowish on the pictures, but it's not as yellow as you can see. Once it will be finished I'll do proper pictures
Thanks.Comment
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Guest
Your doing a great job their she is looking very nice,when you get round to doing the rigging invest in a couple of needle threaders if you hav'nt got one already as this will make it easier for threading blocks and get some blocks of beeswax to run your thread along as this will remove any fuzzyness on the thread and it makes it stiff and easier to work with, have a look on my hms supply thread you may find something helpfull
cheers
steveComment
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Thanks @steve244. I've used normal wax from a candle for now to do the railings. I'll buy a proper beeswax possibly tomorrow, as I'll need it as hell. The deck is FINISHED! YeahNow a lot of work with the masts and riggings. Well, I thought that will be a matter of correct ties etc, but apparently all supplies masts need to be sanded to desired diameter, like 6mm on the bottom and 4 on the top, then 2mm at the very top. What I have at the moment is just 6mm. I have no idea how to do it so far. Any suggestions?
Meanwhile, the pictures!:
And slightly bigger photo:
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-cuxiKaidLTA/VJXAi0vZKFI/AAAAAAAACo0/oGR20v3ePyU/w1500-h505-no/DSC_6954.JPG
My deadline for this ready to be for Christmas failed..Too much overtime at work..
Well, next year then
See you soon.Comment
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That is looking very tidy and err ship shape! This is going to be great when finished.
Ian MComment
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Guest
i have seen people put the mast into a drill and then either just use a strip off a sheet of sandpaper turn on the drill and run the sandpaper up and down the length of dowel but beware as this could burn your fingers due to the friction or put some sandpaper around a spare block of wood then its just a matter of sanding it down to the correct diameter, hope this helps
cheers steveComment
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Guest
thats fine just take it steady invest in a pair of digital callipers if you have'nt got any they're cheap enough off amazon and that idea is better than trying to sand it down in your hand as you will end up with flat edges, the plans should be to scale so in theory you can measure your dowel off the plan just remember to do a bit at a time and check the mast with the hole in the deck as sometimes that can be bigger than the dowel was in the first place.
cheers steveComment
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What I do for sanding the mast is to make it square to the correct diameter ie 4mm down to 2 mm, then sand the corners off to make an octagonal shape, then sand those corners off to make the mast circularComment
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