Jump to content
The Great LSM Twins Group Build ends July 3, 2024 ×

GazzaS

Members
  • Posts

    6,396
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by GazzaS

  1. On 4/11/2023 at 3:57 AM, HubertB said:

    Just read on The Modellingnews that a brand I did not know hereto, ForeArt - ex ForeHobby - has released a set of 3 different versions of the S-38 in 1/72. Certainly more up-to-date than the venerable Airfix E-boat …

    https://www.themodellingnews.com/2023/04/foreart-ex-forehobby-now-back-with-two.html#more

    Hubert

    Thank you for that, Hubert.  Some nice details, for sure.  Tempting...   but my plate is full.  I have three large units to complete before I dare buy another.  Two with 11 inch guns and the one I'm working on with 12 inch guns.

    • Like 3
  2. 5 hours ago, Artful69 said:

    A great kit ... markings are of a great but relatively unknown pilot - compared to a lot of his peers ... Was the top scoring ace in 1943 before being pulled out of frontline service and shoved onto the propaganda train! Reinstated to service when things got more desperate in the home defence later in the war and was one of the main contributors to the development of Me.262 deployment and aerial tactics.

    Rog :)

    The decals are yellowed, so won't be used.  I might put them out in the sun to get the yellow out of the stencils.  But I won't put much trust in the larger decals.  I wouldn't call Nowatny a relatively unknown pilot.  Pretty famous to students of the Luftwaffe.  He had 258 confirmed kills though most were on the Eastern Front.

    • Like 2
  3. On 4/8/2023 at 2:06 PM, Clunkmeister said:

    I’d think steam capstans?  When they needed to deploy, they needed to deploy fairly quickly without alot of piping to quarters for rigging the nets.

    The Kaiser’s High Seas Fleet were all uncommonly attractive. Great subject.  1/350 is just too small for me. 1/200 at a minimum for me with the big ships of the line. 

    Surely you realize that 1/200 scale ships just have more tiny details than a smaller scale?  I've been watching Ron Calverly building his 1/200 scale Bismarck.  Plenty of tiny bits to sweat over.

    • Like 2
  4. Before I edited this post, I was bemoaning the loss of the armored conning tower...    wonder of wonders, I found it.  Still stuck to a blob of blutack and toothpick I had used to spray it black and check for potential reshaping defects.  Originally, the part had poorly defined vision slits.  So, I had chopped off the top...  replaced the vision slit area with segments of Evergreen plastic...   then glue and sand...   all the good stuff.

    Before that, I weathered the coal chutes.  First with dark gray enamels to bring out the shape with shadows, then with a buff colored dry brushing to raise the height.

    IMG_2045.thumb.JPG.30bd7e335ba5dae39a31141381ad7589.JPG

    Then I started putting together the forward superstructure section which houses the bridge.

    IMG_2050.thumb.JPG.069788d41d99da363f2bd936d9f03234.JPG

     

    • Like 5
  5. 36 minutes ago, PanzerWomble said:

    I suspect the capstans , assuming they had similar arrangement at the stern to pull them back ? Only a guess 

    That is another mystery...   Even the Kagero book shows nothing happening at the stern.  Too bad there's no motion-picture film of them being deployed...   that I can find.

    • Like 1
  6. Hi Rob,

         Some of your figures look great.  And then some are out of uniform.

    us_navy_wwii_and_cold_war_uniforms_by_pa

    White is for summer and tropics, Blues for winter in colder climates.  Dungarees for daily working uniform for enlisted men.  Khaki for officers and Chief petty officers for regular work.

    • Like 1
  7. 13 hours ago, Peterpools said:

    Gaz

    Amazing detail work - all those lines and pulleys - just keeping track of what you're are doing and where is an achievement unto itself.

     

    6 hours ago, CANicoll said:

    Echoing Peter's comments.  Using Bob's Buckles was brilliant and maybe the only way to get that done.  I'd almost say don't worry about the pictures - to the eye this looks PERFECT.  The intricacy of the rigging is what captures the eye's attention, as well as the other deck details.  It is really fun to see your builds as I would never attempt anything like this (but the torpedo boat is capturing my attention!).

    :popcorn:

     

    5 hours ago, DocRob said:

    The only thing amiss is real function, Gary :D. The way you made it explains how the mechanism works and I copy Chris about the appearance to the normal eye, which will look good and convincing.

    Cheers Rob

     

    2 hours ago, PanzerWomble said:

    So if you pull on the pulleys the nets deploy? .🙃

    Thank you for the kind words, gents!

    There's still some mystery involved for me in the deployment of the torpedo nets.  There is still no power source directly connected to the nets.  Were electric motors attached to the pulleys to operate them?  Or huge hand cranks (doubtful)?  Were they connected to the capstans for power?  Unknown.

    • Like 1
  8. So...   I've finally finished with the torpedo nets...   I hope.  The nasty tangle at the front of the German major units during the early stages of WWI are difficult to reproduce.  If it weren;t for the Kagero book on Posen, I'd still be lost.

    It took me almost 5 hours to attach 12 pieces of plastic.  Along the way, I separated other completed assemblies and broke off an anchor.

    IMG_2041.thumb.JPG.b1b949249e4ff2822d8c61eadfe96760.JPG

    It didn't quit go to plan.  But hopefully looks the part.

     

    IMG_2042.thumb.JPG.723bf980d28a9748518331ac47ab38f4.JPG

    As I began to set the pulleys, I realised that the bollards that are the base for the cabels on the deck are farther forward on Grosser Kurfurst than they are on Posen.  So, my plans were upset a little.

    IMG_2043.thumb.JPG.c54747e5d776ccd13680210f2ebd9ac7.JPG

    Ideally, the pulleys atop the foredeck would have been held of the deck by the tension in the lines.  And I tried to keep them floating.   But between the stretchy line and the smallness of the parts...  it was too complicated to juggle.  And with collateral damage occurring to other parts, I decided it was time to glue those pulleys down and run the line.

     

    • Like 9
  9. Thank you Carl.  I appreciate you taking the time to show me. 

    That might be too complicated for a little girl.  Might have to start her on a dinosaur or something.   Right now, outside of minecraft and youtube about minecraft...  ...and other crap no kid should be watching.  I have no idea what will catch her interest.

    • Like 5
    • Sad 1
×
×
  • Create New...