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Heller once had a kit of a fictional five-masted barque called Cap Horn that was based on the Preussen kit. If memory serves, the real Cap Horn was a French four-masted barque. I am converting it into the well-documented German P-Line five-masted barque Potosi, a barque-rigged half-sister to Preussen. It is coming along nicely!
Bill
Thanks all for the advice. I have just figured it out. I will use the flat pieces of the plastic sail styrene. It is very thin.
Also if you are interested in the P-line ships have a look at this: amazing stuff. Don't be put off that it is paper. That is what makes this so incredible.
http://www.modelshipworld.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=1135&highlight=passat
Cheers
Current build: Heller's Pamir. Oooooh Yeeehhh.
warshipguy Sorry for taking so long to get back. The hull plates on Preussen measure 1.5 inches by .25 inch. The copper tape comes in .25 inch width. It would be very easy to simply cut the tape to the correct length.
Sorry for taking so long to get back. The hull plates on Preussen measure 1.5 inches by .25 inch. The copper tape comes in .25 inch width. It would be very easy to simply cut the tape to the correct length.
http://www.anythinginstainedglass.com/metals/foil.html
Sorry for taking so long to get back. The hull plates on Preussen measure 1.5 inches by .25 inch. The copper tape comes in .25 inch width. It would be very easy to simply cut the tape to the correct length. Don Stauffer also offers a nice technique.
I would sincerely advise either method over spray paint.
Good luck!
Bill Morrison
Another, cheap method of making hull plates is thin cardboard. Old IBM punch cards make excellent hull plates. The cardboard is thin, and covered with a plastic protective coating, so it primes and paints easily. Often many cards have only a small area punched, and the rest is available to use.
Only problem is they are getting rare. My stash is dwindling to a couple dozen. When they are gone I figure I'll have a devil of a time getting more.
They also make great gun shields on smaller scale ships.
Don Stauffer in Minnesota
Hello!
I have the 1/150 Preussen; I will measure the plate detail and get back to you this evening. One method for simulating plates that will also include some rivet detail is to use copper tape cut to size and run a pattern maker along the edges on the back of the tape. It creates a wonderful rivet pattern. And, since you would be using actual plates, the plate detail looks more authentic.
Back from a long hiatus.
I am currently building the Heller Pamir at 1:150 scale. I would like to simulate the hull plates for just a bit more detail. I have search but cannot find clear enough photos or plans on what this looked like and at what sizes.
My selected method of doing this will be to tape off half the hull and spray 2 or 3 coats of primer and then take off the tape and prime one more time.
I know at this scale it would not really be visible but I have seen 1:350 scale models with this done and it looks attractive.
So my question is: What would have been the dimensions of these plates in full scale and if possible scaled down to 1:150 scale?
Oh I hope Prof. Tilley will join in on this. You have provided me previously with great information and ideas.
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