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Snowberry life raft color

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  • Member since
    February 2006
  • From: Boston
Snowberry life raft color
Posted by Wilbur Wright on Tuesday, July 24, 2007 8:49 PM

Hi All, I'm rapping up my Revell Snowberry and The kit calls for khaki colored liferafts.  Some of the better built Corvettes I've seen have black rubber life rafts which seem to make more sense, even for the 1940's.

Any comments on this<>??? 

 

I've also had a damn time getting my CSS Alabama photos loaded up. It can't be as hard as it seems.... Following directions to the tee. 

 

Thanks men. 

  • Member since
    February 2006
  • From: The green shires of England
Posted by GeorgeW on Wednesday, July 25, 2007 2:29 AM

The Carley float was not made of rubber.

The definition I have is:

A life-raft in the form of a large oval ring of canvas painted to make it waterproof and stuffed with kapok or granulated cork, and with a light wooden  grid inside the oval and hand lines on the outer circumference.

Most of the photos I have seen show the floats are painted a pale colour usually to match the  camouflage of the ship.

With regard to Snowberry all the photos  indicate this.

Snowberry also had two different shaped floats as can be seen on my own humble modelling effort.

  • Member since
    February 2006
  • From: Boston
Posted by Wilbur Wright on Wednesday, July 25, 2007 6:33 PM
Thanks for that info
  • Member since
    March 2005
  • From: West Virginia, USA
Posted by mfsob on Friday, July 27, 2007 8:38 AM

Depends on where the liferaft was located on the ship but, in general, both the US and the Brits followed the rule of painting the life rafts whatever color the camouflage behind it was - and if a color demarcation line ran through the middle of the raft, you got a two-toned raft. Of  course, this could vary from ship to ship depending on local conditions like the availability of paint.

However, the floater nets carried by many US ships were left in their natural black rubber color, although the baskets that held them were painted the appropriate camouflage hue.

  • Member since
    August 2005
  • From: Mansfield, TX
Posted by EdGrune on Friday, July 27, 2007 8:55 AM
 mfsob wrote:

However, the floater nets carried by many US ships were left in their natural black rubber color, although the baskets that held them were painted the appropriate camouflage hue.

Actually, the floater "nets" on US ships were lengths of rope with hard foam floats.   They were not rubber.   They were similar to lane ropes you might see on today's swimming pools. 

from the Floating Drydock Plan eBook

  • Member since
    March 2005
  • From: West Virginia, USA
Posted by mfsob on Friday, July 27, 2007 10:38 AM
You learn something new every day ... I was basing that on the floater nets I saw on the USS North Carolina when I toured her several years ago (I just HAD to reach up and try to pull the end of it out of the basket to see how it was made, but it was too high). I guess with enough coats of paint, it would feel like rubber. Sure looked like it.
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