missileman2000
Would the standing rigging be tarred fiber rore or wire rope?
Excellent question to ask.
Iron wire rope will be about a 1/3 the size of equal natural fibre line. It will also be greased, as it was difficult at sea to keep lamp-black lacquer adhered on wire.
Hadr part for modeling is that theconnections were usually in conical sockets fitted with iron wedges, or filled with tin solder. Iron wire wanted to not be bent more than 9 times diameter lest the fibers/strands break. So, an eyein 1" wire rope wanted to be 9" diameter when made up with a thmble or around an eye.
SO, for modeling purposes, the end points want to be much larger to the eye than for natural fibre lines. This can be anomolous on a model, even while being prototypical.
Another tidbit from the 1880s is that chain was used for rathe a lot of running rigging as it could pass over smaller sheaves than wire rope. Sometimes the chain was only used i nthe "working range" of a given line, then a different line bent on the ends.