Many thanks for those kind words Martyn and Trev. Unfortunately as half expected, our wonderful Mum has gone to join Andy and Dad. She began to lose her strength and will to go on soon after Andy's passing and passed away peacefully in her sleep three weeks ago. She was thankfully back home after two weeks in the local hospital with a chest infection (which was cured with antibiotics) but she continued to get weaker and just wanted to be with Dad and her youngest, (and all our dear dogs waiting for her too). Mum was 97 years old.
So this diary is now for the two of them!
This instalment is a bit wordy I'm afraid, great if you're really interested in all the 'proper' names of the rigging ropes but just skip over them if you're not (to be honest I get really confused over them and have to keep checking what went where on the model as I didn't make any notes as I was doing it - I only have the order the photos come on the SD card to remind me!)
Photo 21 shows another view of the
Robbands being tied onto the mainsail yard. The reason for this photo however is to point out the bunch of unoccupied dangling blocks hanging underneath the maintop (or crow’s nest as they are often called). With all the concentrating on the working rigging of the sails I’d completely missed out the fact that the yards themselves were not actually tied on to the masts! In a way, I suppose they were, there would in reality be a set of double blocks, four in total, two underneath the top (crow’s nest) and two tied onto the yard itself. These are the
Jeer Blocks and the ropes joining them are the
Jeer Tackle, this runs from the bottom of the top block, down to the bottom one, back up to the top block, down again and once more up to the top one before running down to be tied off on the deck below. The kit however took a simpler route – one rope tied around the centre of the yard and then through a hole drilled through the mast and hence down to a belaying pin in a pin rack on the deck. If you think of it, a newbie crewman pulls out the wrong pin and the entire yard falls off the mast!

The situation wasn’t quite so bad in Andy’s model however as I’d also fitted on the
Parrels on each yard, these being a pair of ropes in the middle of the yard which run around the mast through wooden balls (or black glass jewellery beads in my case). The parrels act like little wheels or bearings allowing the yard to roll up and down the mast smoothly. You can make out those beads in all the photos on the first page here and at that moment these were the only things keeping the yards attached to the mast!. Anyway, before I get to remedying the ‘floating’ yards omission,
Photo 22 shows the double block for the
Mizzen sail bowlines being tied off on the main top rail. You might just notice that this block is a slightly different colour to the others – more on that later!
So to get the yards attached a little more accurately, I had to fit on the ropes which allow the yards to be raised and lowered. These are called (logically) the
Yard Lifts. The ones illustrated in
Photos 23 to
25 on the Fore Mast would be called the
Fore Yard Lifts and those on the Main mast would be the
Main Yard Lifts. Interestingly, only the lower sail on each mast is called the Yard Lift, the yards above that take their name from the actual sails, eg, the one above this one is the
Topsail Lift and the one above that, the
Topgallant Lift.
Photo 25 shows the actual run of the
Lift Tackle. The fixed end begins at a) tied to the double block hanging from the platform. This runs down to the second block in from the end of the yard (marked b), also a double but both use only one of the sheaves, and back up to the first block again, through that one (at c) and back down aft-wards to one of the side pin racks and a belaying pin.
So that different coloured block was the result of actually running out of the supplied plastic blocks. I suppose with all the fully detailed running rigging going on I was bound to need more than the kit supplied! There are actually many unused blocks still tied off under the tops or crowsnests, these were definitely supposed to go there according to the instructions but many of them were used as a means of raising and lowering things like the spars, ships stores and boats etc rather than being a part of the ‘full time’ rigging.
Photo 26 illustrates the solution I came up with – make my own resin copies! At the right is the kit plastic block and leading up to it is a rectangular rod of styrene filed with channels to separate the individual blocks with a channel down the sides for the rope to tie into. Each block is also drilled for the running rigging to pass through (only a shallow impression to mark the positions though, the blocks were fully drilled through after casting). The first mould was a vertical type as shown in
Photo 27. I’d assumed that with only shallow indents the resin castings would simply pull straight out of the mould. The fact that the styrene prototype broke into three pieces trying to get it out however changed my mind about that one!
The second mould was a horizontal one as seen curing in
Photo 28. This meant that one side of the moulding was flat and would need to be filed again but it was much easier to get the casting out. Instead of painting the blocks to represent the wood I tried something new – a pigment additive made by
“Culr” shown in
Photo 29, which turns the resin itself brown. The colouring works chemically and does have an effect on the resin’s curing as you can no doubt see in
Photo 30. Admittedly I was only mixing a small amount of resin but just adding four drops of colour resulted in the resin bubbling up out of the mould as shown above. Trying it again with only two drops and the resin behaved itself resulting in the strip of blocks at the bottom.
The first two DIY blocks were fitted on as seen in
Photos 31 and
32. The first one was tied off on the mizzen topmast stay whilst the other was secured to the railing at the rear of the main top or crows nest.
Photo 33 shows both those blocks arrowed with their running rigging attached, the mizzen stay block takes the
main mast topgallant brace ropes and the one on the rail is for the
mizzen topsail bowlines. As all these extra ropes were going in, the belaying racks down on the deck were starting to fill up nicely with a lot of rope beginning to cascade over the side as seen in
Photo 34.
In the next instalment there is one extra pair of pieces to be added to the hull in order to bring the mainsail up to scratch, well, not exactly fully up to scratch but a lot nearer to it than the kit did!
Until then 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