Grateful (and very belated) thanks to all those wonderful comments on the figurehead!
Well, she’s finally made it! The ‘Ole Vic’ is out of ‘Reserve’ and back on the workbench. I almost can’t believe how long it’s been – three years have gone by since the last work I did on her but that was a rebuild and completion of her figure head. As I said in that installment I’ll have to get back onto the chainwales and looking at that part of the build it’s almost five years to the day! The date of the last posting on this section was the 17th of January 2016!!
For all that time the old girl has been stored on the bench under her yellow duster tarpaulin and despite that (probably because they’re pretty old dusters and quite thin) she’s still managed to pick up a slight coat of fine dust in the nooks and crannies, especially inside the gun ports. Nothing too much though and easily brushed away with a soft paintbrush. The things I did notice however after removing the dusters shown in
Photo 1 was that firstly, some of the blackened brass chains are more rusty than black now, again, not too bad but I’ll need to see how they compare with the new chains before deciding whether I’ll need to create a ‘rusty iron’ paint to bring them all to the same ‘look’ or not and secondly, after five years of summer heat and winter cold up in the attic workroom, a few of the mounted cannon have parted company with the deck and are only held in place by their rigging! This time around though I have that excellent
Deluxe Card Glue and a pack of tiny disposable pipettes – I’m going to try sucking up a small quantity of the glue and ‘injecting’ it under the cannon to re-glue their wooden support blocks back to the deck again. That’s for later however, the first thing I had to do was to go back to my own diary and figure out what the heck I was doing down there five years ago!
Photo 2 shows her together with a pair of printed diary pages to remind me of the task in hand (and how I was doing it) and the pair of reference books I’ve been using throughout the build. Having seen that I had made some little jigs to construct the chains on, the obvious next question was ‘What the hell did I do with them?’ Fortunately they weren’t far away (a miracle in
my workroom) so I could try and get back into the routine of miniature blacksmithing again.
Photo 3 shows the first of the lower brackets under construction. Made from 0.5mm copper wire, formed around the nail jig and then hammered out flat on the miniature jewellers anvil as shown in the insert. The first two brackets are seen test fitting in
Photo 4 with the first one nailed in place in
Photo 5. What I’ve changed this time around is that the hammered copper brackets are now being chemically blackened instead of painting them as I was before. They
were painted with
Admiralty Paints Metal Black but over the intervening years that bottle has dried out solid (strangely, all the other Admiralty colours are fine!) I’m using the last of my
Blacken-it bottle for these chains and nails although I’ve just sent off on Ebay for a 10ml bottle of a blackening solution which looks very much like the old Blacken-it and its description says it works on brass, bronze, lead, pewter and copper. If it works that will be great (it was only £2.99!) Another thing I have changed is the material for the lower chains themselves. The first ones were made from 0.5mm brass wire, as you can see in
Photo 6, before leaving the Victory for her unintentional period in Reserve, I’d made all the upper chain links for this port side main channel so I only have to do the slightly more complicated lower links (complicated as they are narrower at the bottom than the top!) For the rest of them however, I’m using 0.4mm brass wire (half hard). The difference in diameter is hardly noticeable but the wire is considerably easier to bend and shape. The brass chain links, brass fine nails and the copper brackets are first shaped, then dipped into a Poundshop bottle of Nail Polish remover (acetone) to completely de-grease them. After a gentle wrap up in a paper tissue they are then dropped into the Blacken-it, about half an inch deep in a re-cycled cleaned jam jar (cranberry sauce actually)! I’m also using a little item I bought to help with resin casting in the winter – a heat mat of the kind used for reptile and tarantula tanks (no I bought another one – my Tarantula is fine and warm still!
) With the Blacken-it solution warmed up it only takes a few minutes to blacken the copper and brass, cold, it can take over an hour and left too long the parts come out half the size they went in. Once they are blackened off they are removed with tweezers and dropped into another glass jar full of clean water to neutralize the chemical then dabbed again with the paper tissue to dry them off ready for fixing in place. Also in
Photo 6, the next lower chain along doesn’t have a bracket but is fixed directly to the hull right on the corner of the gun port. DelPrado builders have to take extreme care around these ports – under the wood surround is the cast metal box, which forms the actual gun port – tap a nail too close and its possible to dislodge the metal box away from the hull and rib – that’s why I always pre-drill the hole first to make sure nothing’s behind it!
Another thing that I remembered after coming back to the Victory was the need for an extra, directed light source! All the lighting in my workroom comes from directly above the workbench. This is fine for the vast majority of the builds but has one drawback when I arrived at this stage all those years back – building the chains for the channels involves working underneath the channels themselves, in other words – in the shadows! You need a light source beaming into the work area from the side to illuminate the spot. Last time I was using my work lamp with umpteen white LEDs stood on its end. This was great but in the meantime the darned thing has broken its battery compartment lid and can’t be made to stay on. Looking on Ebay (as always) I found this super little reading lamp for just £6.39! It’s powered by an internal rechargeable battery which is charged up via a USB port (or one of my mains USB plugs I got for the Kindle), light as a feather and the neck is completely bendable to put the light just where its needed. There is no actual moving switch, just a printed symbol over a touch sensitive spot on the base – first touch switches it on, second makes it brighter, third brighter still and fourth turns it off again – an absolute bargain and easier than the start of this installment when I was balancing a Cree torch on top of a plastic mixing cup and roll of tape to get the right height for the spotlight!
My new best tool is shown in
Photo 7. Finally for this long overdue return,
Photo 8 illustrates the completed port side Main Channel Chains assembly. Just checked the starboard channel – the deadeyes are all there, just got to start the entire chain part now!
Back again with that lot next, hopefully in a lot less than five years!
Until then, stay safe and 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