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« Last Post by John Davies on 13 November 2024, 11:05:44 »
Thank you for the compliment. Much appreciated. Velarde was indeed a very satisfying project and she does look lovely afloat.
She has one fault, but it is not obtrusive. The waterlines is about 3-4mm lower than it ought to be, so she floats that little bit higher. This is actually a deliberate mistake, because to get her right down to her proper waterline would have meant adding another pound or two of lead, making launching and recovery that bit harder... I am not getting any younger! But she is a pretty boat.
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« Last Post by rondean on 13 November 2024, 08:38:26 »
HI very nice to see a restored model back on the water looks excellent Ron
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« Last Post by John Davies on 11 November 2024, 17:19:24 »
Remember cargo liners? They were elegant ships. They were almost all clearly designed by people who had a eye for line. They were usually kept immaculately clean. Today they are gone, replaced by container ships, very efficient but hideously ugly.
Velarde was a particularly good-looking example. She was a “reefer”, shipping parlance for a refrigerated ship, so she was painted white. This was for a severely practical reason. A darker colour would soak up the sun’s heat, necessitating a larger refrigerating plant, more expensive to install and to run. But it does look good. Deans have always had an eye for a ship.
Apparently she was well liked by her crews. She was not too big, she was modern and comfortable and she made short passages between Spain and London with fruit, so they got frequent shore leave. Probably got lots of fresh oranges to take home to their families, too. If she loaded at Cadiz, close to Seville, (well known for the best oranges) and made for London, she would, at 14 knots, be at sea for a little under four days. From Barcelona she would take a bit over five days. A ship doing a regular run to, say, India or even the “Lavender Hull Mob”, as the Union Castle line were known, on the run to Cape Town, would be at sea for much longer.
I always wanted the model, but never had the spare time or the spare cash. So when a quite nicely built example came up s/h for about £200 less than the cost of the kit, I bought it. The basic work done by the previous builder is not quite as good as my best but it is okay. Also, I did not have to spend hours doing it.
The model was about 90% complete. There were a few oddities, like a rudder much bigger than shown on the plan, with a linkage allowing a 90 degree throw each side of centre. But this was easily corrected. The Deans motor and double coupling gave beautifully smooth running. The broad green waterline stripe needed to be painted on. Kabuki Tape is wonderful stuff. It leaves no blebs or bobbles and gives an excellent clear edge. The portholes had to be drilled out and glazed, using tiny blobs of clear epoxy applied with a cocktail stick. This is easier to do than it sounds and works very well. A couple of photos found online provided useful guidance to their positions. The derricks were present but needed to be installed and rigged up. There was a question mark over the railings, which were okay in most places but a bit wonky in a few. I had the necessary stanchions in the spares box and considered uprooting the lot and re-doing them, but, as I wanted this to be a quick project, decided to live with it.
There was a sort of sling affair to launch her, but at nine and a half pounds it is feasible to do it all by hand, so this was turned into a stand. A couple of pieces of dowel were added, with a pillar drill used to ensure the holes were true and it all went together. Having many years ago built a “Clan Ross” at over five feet and much too heavy for ease of handling, I applaud Deans’ choice of a ship that makes a manageable model.
So there she is. This was more a refurbishment than a build, but she looks well enough. The derricks give her a nicely complex outline to counterpoint the elegance of the basic hull form. The green boot-topping sets her off well. It was pleasant to be able to complete the work an unknown builder had begun.
On the water she is a complete delight. Running her leaves a person feeling oddly smoothed out and calm. She has a couple of handling peculiarities. Although the throw on that large rudder was reduced to something reasonable, if it is put hard over she slows noticeably in a turn. Put it over hard at low speed and give a short but firm burst of throttle and she turns very tightly, which can be useful. In a straight line, take the power off and she just keeps going. She carries her way well, a consequence of having sweet lines that slip through the water easily and being ballasted to her running weight of nine and a half pounds on lead ingots and a 4ah 6v gell cell I used for no better reason than I had it handy. All this adds up to inertia as well as stability. A kick astern does not stop her instantly, so approaches to the bank are made carefully. But she looks best running dead straight, cruising along happily at part throttle, using the minimum of energy in an economical fashion, to keep her sliding though the water, very like the real ship.
Altogether, Velarde was an extremely satisfying project. My grateful thanks to Deans and their unerring eye for a ship.
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« Last Post by rondean on 07 November 2024, 11:29:24 »
HI A prototype model that has been in store has to go as we need the space. The RIVA launch was a prototype model, not a made from timber, but a rather special way of producing a lightweight detailed model. The timber and planking was all laid in reverse in to the mould, then the glass fibre was moulded inside. When the moulding was removed, the timber and planking was polished and varnished and detailed, even the cushions on the sun bed are real cushions. Performance is excellent, tough and long lived as any glass fibre boat. It never went in to full production as such it was far to expensive with highly skilled labour costs. Probably you will never see another one, Model come complete with motor speed controller a real stunner.See it at our open days on Sat 21st Dec Price £395.00 Regards Deans Marine see it in action here on you tubehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DqFdhkORofk
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« Last Post by elmo56 on 06 November 2024, 18:39:36 »
Hi Ron, Thanks for that, I'll give it a go. Steve.
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« Last Post by rondean on 06 November 2024, 17:16:44 »
Hi just finishing restoring one myself I have used Halfords Satin lacquer for decks, ( I would always do a test piece first anyway on anything ? Ron
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« Last Post by elmo56 on 06 November 2024, 08:34:23 »
Hi all, Just about halfway through this one (this is the 9th of Ron's great kits that I've done), hull painted and decking complete. Time to varnish the decks, I made a sample piece to try first before committing to do the decks - I used Vallejo gloss polyurethane varnish, it gave the desired finish but darkened the planking. Now I didn't use the planking that came with it I bought 2mm Walnut strips (planked-.5mm rigging thread for caulking-planked and so on). Now I'm thinking should I sanding seal first and try again on sample piece or can anyone suggest a varnish that will not darken when applied please. Many Thanks.
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« Last Post by rondean on 29 October 2024, 16:12:55 »
Deans Marine test run r c PT 40 HYDROFOIL Another model that needs to go to clear space in the storeroom, used to have some great fun with this model back in the 70s, So a quick refurb and on sale, That did not work, it took 2 weeks and it fought me all the way, seized up nuts, bolts rusty joints, corroded pins, faulty radio. black wire, corroded shaft, seized prop, it went on forever it seemed. It ended up a full refurb, new black motor, new ESC lipo batteries, s/st shaft, and new prop. now runs much better than the original r c fit out as much lighter and less top hamper. Up for sale but may keep it a bit longer so much fun to drive. £395.00 Not incl radio, collect only or see it at our xmas open day 21 Dec see it in action on you tube here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O48kmpU-_cs
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« Last Post by johnhartman on 29 October 2024, 10:45:08 »
nice boat. congrats
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« Last Post by rondean on 25 October 2024, 09:51:23 »
Hi The Peterborough are model boat club has been donated over 150 book collection mainly on submarines to be sold to go to club funds. Some modern books as navel history plus some very old and rare books from the 50s _ 60s They are being stored at Deans marine for viewing and purchase, plus they will be on display at the xmas open days on 21st Dec anyone interested drop a e-mail to deans marine deansmarine@yahooo.co.uk. Regards c/o PAMBC
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