Many thanks there Alan, This is certainly a lot different from my previous ship building as you'll see below!
Hi Again!
Before moving on to this instalment which is comprised mainly of cutting bits off the already ‘basic’ kit parts, I’d just like to mention how my appreciation for the hard work young Daisy is putting into her Pirate Brig is increasing daily. This is the first time I’ve ever worked on a solid hull construction model and I never realised what hard work they are!

I’ve been sanding and filing, then sanding some more, looking for my wood rasping tools (without success)

and finally giving up on the filing altogether and chiselling the flaming wood off instead!

Personally, plank on frame is a whole lot
easier than this! So well done Daisy and keep it up!
OK then. In
Photo 1, the first part of the original kit to be removed was the ‘fence’ along the waist area. As you can see from the picture, one side came away cleanly but the other remained stubbornly glued in place and had to be sawn away. Eventually, the waist will be enclosed with a solid wall or bulwark with a new slightly raised deck level.
Now this
would have been the main area of work on the overall deck layout, unfortunately (for me) dear Stevie-o (bless his little socks

) mentioned that
he had also received this ship from his Mum a couple of years ago and had also gone to work on it
including cutting away that unwanted third deck at the stern. Well, couldn’t be ‘aving that now, could I?

So off it had to come as seen under way in
Photo 2 and completed in
Photo 3.
(I forgot to mention that after this, the whole hull was then sanded down to remove the varnish and the 'wales', these will be replaced after the hull has been veneered.)
That left the remaining half of the sawn through deck block to be either removed or shaped into a steeper gradient for the poop deck planks to go on. This was the point where my patience with heavy manual wood removal using files and sanders ran out. As you can see in
Photo 4, I eventually found a far quicker technique – I used the Exacto razor saw to cut a series of lines down through the block and then used my set of wood turning chisels in a way they were never intended for – a good smacking with a lightweight hammer to chisel off the offending pieces of block which can be seen in
Photo 5
. After a light sanding the poop deck then looked as seen in
Photo 6. The stern
torpedo tube is actually half of the hole pre-drilled in the stern which took a dowel used in the rigging set up. (I can still remember a 1940’s war time American cartoon about the Pilgrim Fathers with a really funny scene featuring the Mayflower – as the ship sailed past, the bow was full of 15th Century English settlers gazing at the New World, whilst at the stern was a full complement of US sailors in steel helmets manning an anti aircraft gun with ‘Anchors Aweigh’ blaring out!)
It was as this point that I decided that the rudder may as well come in to the upgrade schedule, so off that came too as in
Photo 7. I still have to go over the ‘stump’ with the detail sander yet though.
Photo 8 illustrates the poop deck with the first few ‘add ons’ – lollipop stick spacers to incline the future decking planks at the steeper angle. As you can see, the forward one has had the cut out ground away to allow the mizzen mast to go in later. The two diagram additions show the middle deck support to be fitted later and the proposed poop deck bulwarks to be added after the stern ‘plate’ has been cut to size and glued on. Before designing the plate however, the right angled stern had to be cut down into a raked appearance, there is only one step from the hull to the transom on the real ship, not the two found here. I simply drew a pencil line from the first step to the top of the stern and cut the excess wood away with the razor saw again as shown in
Photo 9. The new sloped or ‘raked’ stern can be seen in
Photo 10.
So that’s it for now. I’ve just won the RAF Emergency Set on Ebay and my set of 2000 red bricks has arrived (I don’t think it’s going to be enough!

) but anyway, I’ll be back with the Mayflower in between the main bouts of modelling, so I’ll see you when I see you on
this diary!
Happy Modelling to you All!
Robin
Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
First wooden ship:
The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second:
Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third:
HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1