| Hull Coppering |
| Saturday, 25 February 2006 | |||||||||||||||||||
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Wooden hull is basically done and I am so proud of it! I have never expected before I could really do it. It was tough but it was not as bad as I had expected. Important thing here is that during planking, I did not have to care about how planks were laid next to each other as all will be covered anyway. Well, I mean I did care but not as much as I would have if were about to do hull of historic ship and would want to leave realistic timber visible.
![]() Rivets and plates of the hull Here comes a big one. Originally I planned to plank bulkheads, sand it, shape it, fill wherever would be required and then nicely paint it. However, somewhere deep in my mind I had this idea of plating the hull as it would have looked in real live. I was so lucky to get picture from KID showing hull with totally cool lines of steel plates and rivets! Having such details I had to do decent steel plates. From the pictures you can figure out the distance between real frames and how plates were laid over them. I only had to simulate that. My Method of Plating
![]() Rivets making tools
You can see first results. I used aluminium from coke and beer cans. I thought it would work. It did only at the beginning; I would not be able to finish the job with that. Aluminium from cans is not plastic enough! Also I was thinking that rivets are a bit too big. Finally made up my mind and removed everything and started from the beginning… this time using proper 0.1 mm copper!
KeelOn one of the pictures you can see nice brass keel. Before I started to put copper plates I decided to attach keel first. The keel I made of U brass profile (5x3mm). I glued it with 2 components epoxy resin (UHU). Actually all copper plates I glued also with UHU but only simple all-purpose elastic one.
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| Last Updated ( Monday, 06 November 2006 ) | |||||||||||||||||||
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