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Archives for 2008

1:16 Fiddlehead – Decking

March 2, 2008 by Bob Easton Leave a Comment

a slightly different shapeThere are six parts to the deck. Along each side is a covering board, long and constant width, following the line of the sheer. On the ends, slightly overlapping the covering boards are deck pieces, 2 at each end. Everything meets neatly in the middle.

Here is where we depart from the drawings. Somewhere “back when” I created a curve for the sheer clamp that differs from the drawings enough to make the pattern for the covering boards a misfit.

new plans for covering boardsResolve this by laying a piece of paper over the boat and making a tracing by lightly using the side of a pencil’s lead. (The same as tracing grave stones.)

oooopsMeasure once cut twice. After all the careful pattern making, I made at least one board too short. The penalty, go back to milling.

 

 

very easy to snag and breakI’ve mentioned a couple of times that this stuff is really thin, especially when we get to these boards which are 3/16 in thick (1:1). Merrily sanding along with a sanding stick, it’s all to easy to catch the end of the piece. If you’re lucky it gives you a good scare by how it bows and quickly snaps back. If not lucky, … it’s back to the mill.

covering boards completeEventually, the covering boards get completed.

Click on any image to see a larger version.

Filed Under: Fiddlehead model, Model building

1:16 Fiddlehead – Deck Framing

February 26, 2008 by Bob Easton Leave a Comment

first carlinsAll of the deck framing for this boat runs fore and  aft. The parts are therefore called carlins. The first carlins are short, running between the stems and bulkheads.

Once the short carlins are secure, the longer ones fit in notches in the bulkheads, a notch in the mid-frame, and end abutted to the short carlins. Through the middle section of the boat, these carlins define the edge of the decking.

deck and cover board carlinsFitting them in place was a bit fussy.  On the 1:1 version, there are all sorts of clamps that might be used. Not so at this scale. I ended up devising a clamp made up of a short board with notches in each side. Wedging the board between clamp and carlin did the trick.

We can see the painted watertight compartment in this picture.

Click any image to see a larger version.

Filed Under: Fiddlehead model, Model building

1:16 Fiddlehead – Interior Paint

February 19, 2008 by Bob Easton Leave a Comment

The best time to paint the insides of the wtertight compartments is now, before the deck or the deck framing goe on. The plans suggest shellac. I used a thin white paint instead. For models, I use acrylic artist colors and thin them very thin with water. I also used matte medium in this case, to dull the shine.  … although who will be inspecting the paint through a tiny hatch?

The open part of the interior is finished with clear semi-gloss. I use Minwax  Polycrylic.

Filed Under: Fiddlehead model, Model building

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