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Nimitz kit quibbles & boot top question

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  • Member since
    November 2005
Nimitz kit quibbles & boot top question
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, October 1, 2004 8:01 AM
Just got my Trumpter 1/350 Nimitz from e-hobbyland pre-order. What a kit! Small quibble - the tiny bolts and nuts for the upper hull braces were packed LOOSE in the box so instead of 10 sets I have 9 bolts and 8 nuts. Off to Lenscrafters this AM to see if I can talk them out of a couple of usable bolts/nuts - otherhwise CA I guess. Not a big deal - just irritating.

But I need some help about the boottop location (I am building the full hull version). From the photos it looks like the boottop should go on the lower hull as the photos show a thin band of haze grey between the bilge vents (molded on to the upper hull) and the boottop but this leaves an awfully small draft below the boottop. My instincts are to put the boottop on the upper hull but his will cover the bilge vents. Any opinions?

Ed Mini
edmini@inftek.com
  • Member since
    March 2004
  • From: Spartanburg, SC
Posted by subfixer on Monday, October 4, 2004 12:31 PM
The bilge ports are painted at the whim of the bos'n mates who are down at the waterline doing the painting. If they feel artistic, they may take that extra little effort to make the demarkation line exact. If they are nursing a hangover and are bobbing around in a john boat with paint bucket and roller, they may just splatter the paint around just to make the chief think they've done something for the day. Hull painting isn't the same as painting an aircraft or a sports car and if you ever saw it up close you would notice all kinds of sloppy work.
As a side note: back in 1974, we pulled into Hong Kong and had some local painters come alongside and paint our hull while we went on liberty. (this was the USS Ranger CVA-61) We provided the paint and the Chinese provided the labor. They applied the paint with rags attached to poles and just slathered the hull like you would slop BBQ sauce on a rack of ribs. There was a slick of paint all around the ship for a hundred feet. What a mess! But the boat sure looked good from a distance. Accent on "distance".
Just paint your model the way you think it looks best, that's the way a sailor would do.

I'm from the government and I'm here to help.

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