weasel, First, my appologies, I didn't intend to hijack your thread, but it began to appear that I did.
A glass of wine with you, sir! Apology? Never in life! Hijacking a thread, such stuff! The more threads on our dear ol' barky the better, do you not see, ha, ha, ha! I give you joy in your new thread!
But seriously folks....
I think you have hit the proverbial nail on the head with your decision to model the movie version of Surprise, a.k.a. the "HMS" Rose, as modified for the film. It's the only source of "accurate" plans we have, at least to my knowledge. I like the idea of following one KNOWN plan and sticking to it; to try to go with questionable published plans, fanciful wooden models, and written descriptions leaves me uncomfortable, like I'm just guessing. If I put that much effort into a model project I want it to be accurate according to something real.
As I'm sure you are well aware, there are great pics of Rose-as-Surprise at the HMS Rose website. To adapt the Lindberg kit I suppose you have abandoned the kit decks for wood-grained styrene sheet? And here is my burning question: can you describe how you cut and spliced the hull, specifically, how you rejoined the sections, and blended in the seam? What happened to the kit's wood grain? Sand it all off? How did you hide the seam, please?
I'm currently on book 20 (the last) in the series, Blue at the Mizzen (and I'm bummed). In reading the series I have made some notes on POB's written descriptions of Surprise, as well as notes on Geoff Hunt's cover artwork for the series. Hunt's artwork is reputed to be "very accurate", even by O'Brian himself, but accurate according to what I don't know. In any case I present my notes below for the board's perusal, use, or non-use:
HMS Surprise According to PO’B
Text References:
The Letter of Marque
Quote 1, p.37: “’… And even now, although this is not the Admiral’s supper table,’ he said quietly, looking at the wheel, which in the Surprise was just forward of the mizenmast, ten feet away, with its helmsman…”
Quote 2, p. 66: “…but the four men at the wheel and the officer standing behind them with one arm around the mizenmast…”
Implication: The wheel is in fact forward of the mizzen, not behind, as usually depicted, ca. 1813
Quote, p. 66: “Most of the watch were in the waist, sheltering from the worst of the spray, rain and flying water under the break in the forecastle…”
Implication: Either 1) that there is a step up from the waist to the forecastle, OR 2) that the waist is open and one can go directly under the forecastle deck (2 seems more likely)
The Yellow Admiral
Quote, p. 131: “…he fell: fell almost straight, just brushing the maintop in his fall and striking one of the starboard quarterdeck carronades…”
Implication: The quarterdeck had more than one carronades and one was located very near the main mast, ca. 1813-1814
The Hundred Days
Quote, p. 127-128: “The gun crews had been waiting for the word, and now the red-painted lids all flew up as one, while two seconds later the guns ran out…”
Implication: The gun port lids were painted red, presumably on the inside, since the exterior had the Nelson Chequer; perhaps the interior walls of the gun deck were red, ca. 1813-1814
Quote, p. 165: “…he had given Billy Green, armourer’s mate, a shove as he went aft along the gangway, a shove that Green had returned with such force that Killick plunged between the skid beams to the deck below…”
Implication: The waist was indeed open, with gangways on both sides and skid-beams for the boats and spars, and not grated over, ca. 1813-1814
Geoff Hunt Cover Art:
The Truelove
1. Shows ship’s boats on davits at stern and on starboard quarter (and, presumably, larboard quarter), ca. 1813-1814
The Wine Dark Sea
1. Shows the quarterdeck extending forward to the location of the main mast, ca. 1813-1814
2. Shows an open-topped waist with skid-beams supporting ship’s boats, ca. 1813-1814
Blue at the Mizzen
1. Shows the quarterdeck extending forward to the location of the main mast, 1815
2. Shows an open-topped waist with skid-beams supporting ship’s boats, 1815
3. (on full-sized painting, not just the book cover) Shows ship’s boats on davits at stern and on starboard quarter (and, presumably, larboard quarter), 1815
A lot of variability here. That's why I like the idea of doing the movie ship plan, since trying to sort out all the other info seems undoable.
Anyway, I am inspried by your Surprise thus far and am glad that my kit (well, the hull) is still on my desk, masking taped together, and not put back into the stash. Your gallery windows are some fine styrene work, outstanding! Can't wait to see more!
All for now, and hope I haven't been boring,
Weasel
P.S.: If you see weird formating above, I have no idea how that happened.....