Thank you for your input Michael.
I still have vivid memories of going to a Restaurant on the harbour at Penzance in Cornwall, England called ‘The Revenue Cutter’. In the entrance they had a model of the Cutty Sark in a glass display case. I used to examine it every time I visited there and marvel at the incredible detail. It was so well built that it took a while before I realized it was made from a plastic kit!
I went to the local hobby shop to enquire if they had such a kit. They had the Revell Thermopylae on the shelf so I settled for that.
That was 40 years ago. In those days we did not have the luxury of the internet and wonderful forums like this for discussion and the exchange of knowledge, not to mention research!
I remember the excitement at the thought of building such a large and complicated model. I was totally confident that I would complete it in no time at all. I followed the instructions very carefully, step by step. I soon became dissatisfied very early on and never finished it.
A couple of years later I did buy the Cutty Sark and I almost finished this kit but remember still getting very frustrated by order of assembly proposed in the instructions. (I had already learned a lot about not following the sequences in the instructions from the abandoned Thermopylae).
I even made a trip to Greenwich, London to take photographs of the actual ship to help me with the colors and rigging. It was a dark, damp, grey day. The photographs did not come out too well but at least I had seen ‘her’ and walked her deck!
My kit remained unfinished for years, I had grand ideas of it being in a showcase, but there were so many inaccuracies… Then we moved house.
The bowsprit was snapped plus other damage. It shared space with the wreck of the Thermopylae on a shelf on the garage for many years until I admitted defeat and committed them both to a landfill.
I hate failure and I made a vow, all those years ago, that I would complete that model before I died. Well I can’t wait much longer…
Back then, I never thought about using any materials other than those supplied in the kit but do remember being concerned about those little plastic eyebolts.
I did, laboriously, belay correctly using the figure of eight topped off with a few loops, soaking the thread with a mix tube cement and liquid cement. I think this technique prevented me suffering from broken pins (due to strain) because the thread, pin and pin rail were all bonded together in one lump!
I am experimenting, at the moment, with some thick copper wire, to see if I can make my own replacement pins because it seems to make sense but would love to hear if anyone else has suffered breaking pins after their model has been finished.
Geoff