Paper Ship: Bismarck, HMV, 1:250

Paper Ship: Bismarck, HMV, 1:250

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Discussion

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,161 posts

184 months

Thursday 22nd August 2019
quotequote all
I never intended to build this one, but in the end I couldn’t resist the challenge:



Couldn’t really build it without the laser-cut set (which cost as much as the kit):



It’s a big one - over a metre long and 7545 parts:





Also got this awesome book as a reference:





Two years minimum for this one I think.

dudleybloke

19,817 posts

186 months

Thursday 22nd August 2019
quotequote all
Bloody hell. That's one monster of a kit.
But if anyone can do it justice it's you!

Looking forward to seeing it progress.

4321go

638 posts

187 months

Thursday 22nd August 2019
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Hooray!!!!!

RDMcG

19,142 posts

207 months

Thursday 22nd August 2019
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I'm looking forward to this. smile

Zad

12,698 posts

236 months

Friday 23rd August 2019
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I'm a big fan of the Anatomy Of the Ship books! Very much looking forward to this.

Fast and Spurious

1,320 posts

88 months

Friday 23rd August 2019
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Seven thousand, five hundred and forty five!

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,161 posts

184 months

Friday 23rd August 2019
quotequote all
Fast and Spurious said:
Seven thousand, five hundred and forty five!
When it says 'parts' what it actually means is bits of paper you have to cut out and make into parts...

I just looked, and the largest paper ship I built so far was the Mellum,

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

and that was 1179 parts, and it took me about a year. So it might be more than a 2 year build.

anonymous-user

54 months

Friday 23rd August 2019
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dr_gn said:
When it says 'parts' what it actually means is bits of paper you have to cut out and make into parts...

I just looked, and the largest paper ship I built so far was the Mellum,

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

and that was 1179 parts, and it took me about a year. So it might be more than a 2 year build.
Can you stop posting and get on with it. We’re keen to see some progress. hehe

That other thread about the Mellon is great, I’m just getting stuck into that now enjoying a coffee sitting in the sun.

ETA just seen THAT thread links to another ship build. hehe

Edited by anonymous-user on Friday 23 August 10:04

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,161 posts

184 months

Friday 23rd August 2019
quotequote all
El stovey said:
dr_gn said:
When it says 'parts' what it actually means is bits of paper you have to cut out and make into parts...

I just looked, and the largest paper ship I built so far was the Mellum,

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

and that was 1179 parts, and it took me about a year. So it might be more than a 2 year build.
Can you stop posting and get on with it. We’re keen to see some progress. hehe

That other thread about the Mellon is great, I’m just getting stuck into that now enjoying a coffee sitting in the sun.

ETA just seen THAT thread links to another ship build. hehe

Edited by El stovey on Friday 23 August 10:04
I’ve built four so far: Wuppertal, Mellum, Battleford and Emden. They’re all on this forum somewhere.

I’m planning to make a start on the Bismarck this weekend, I need a very large flat surface to build the waterline hull, so I’ll use the granite worktop in the kitchen. Rest of the family are away, so it wont get damaged.



anonymous-user

54 months

Friday 23rd August 2019
quotequote all
dr_gn said:
I’ve built four so far: Wuppertal, Mellum, Battleford and Emden. They’re all on this forum somewhere.

I’m planning to make a start on the Bismarck this weekend, I need a very large flat surface to build the waterline hull, so I’ll use the granite worktop in the kitchen. Rest of the family are away, so it wont get damaged.
Will it stay there for 2 years? hehe

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,161 posts

184 months

Friday 23rd August 2019
quotequote all
El stovey said:
dr_gn said:
I’ve built four so far: Wuppertal, Mellum, Battleford and Emden. They’re all on this forum somewhere.

I’m planning to make a start on the Bismarck this weekend, I need a very large flat surface to build the waterline hull, so I’ll use the granite worktop in the kitchen. Rest of the family are away, so it wont get damaged.
Will it stay there for 2 years? hehe
Only while the glue sets! Ill get some MDF to build the rest of it on, then transfer it to a decent base. I priced up a case for it - same design as with the other four, and that alone is £250.

shortar53

548 posts

273 months

Friday 23rd August 2019
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OH. HELL. YES.

>pulls up a chair<
this will be epic.

also, it's probably gonna make me want to build a new one.

robemcdonald

8,783 posts

196 months

Sunday 25th August 2019
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That’s a long term investment. Kudos to you.

ETA. Have you ever considered one of those CNC cutters they sell at hobbycraft?

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,161 posts

184 months

Sunday 25th August 2019
quotequote all
robemcdonald said:
That’s a long term investment. Kudos to you.

ETA. Have you ever considered one of those CNC cutters they sell at hobbycraft?
Yes I’m wondering if it’s one project too far.

I’ve heard of the cutters, but not sure how they’d help with this model?

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,161 posts

184 months

Sunday 25th August 2019
quotequote all
Hits a vopper!




Turn7

23,607 posts

221 months

Sunday 25th August 2019
quotequote all
RDMcG said:
I'm looking forward to this. smile
And me...!

robemcdonald

8,783 posts

196 months

Sunday 25th August 2019
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dr_gn said:
Yes I’m wondering if it’s one project too far.

I’ve heard of the cutters, but not sure how they’d help with this model?
As I understand it you scan the page of parts and it cuts them out for you.

You can preview and adjust the cuts before “pulling the trigger” to use the common vernacular.

Heartworm

1,923 posts

161 months

Sunday 25th August 2019
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Daft question, what are the laser cut parts you mention if it still requires you to cut the pieces?

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,161 posts

184 months

Sunday 25th August 2019
quotequote all
Heartworm said:
Daft question, what are the laser cut parts you mention if it still requires you to cut the pieces?
You substitute the laser-cut parts for paper ones (indicated by a circled “L” on the sheets). Small details like brackets and railings or other items that are very difficult to cut out from paper. The alternative is to leave the paper railings with a grey background, but it doesn’t look great.



ETA: The laser-cut parts are held on their sheets by a few small nibs that you just cut with a scalpel. You don’t need to cut them out.

Edited by dr_gn on Monday 26th August 01:09

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,161 posts

184 months

Sunday 25th August 2019
quotequote all
robemcdonald said:
dr_gn said:
Yes I’m wondering if it’s one project too far.

I’ve heard of the cutters, but not sure how they’d help with this model?
As I understand it you scan the page of parts and it cuts them out for you.

You can preview and adjust the cuts before “pulling the trigger” to use the common vernacular.
Sounds risky!