Wednesday, 31 December 2014

My Endeavour 1/60 Wooden Ship Build - Part 1


This build of Captain Cooks' Endeavour ship in wood looks like it is going to be one of the hardest builds I have ever done. After having a brief look at the instructions I had to take a second look to try and work out what to do. I looked at all the pieces of timber, fabric sails, nails and other metal pieces and then studied the instructions. I had to read the first instruction a couple of times before I could understand where to start.




With this build being a 1/60 scale the overall length of the ship is going to be about 700mm long. This is one of the largest builds I have ever started and one of the most time consuming.



The first part of the build was to attach the ribs to the false keel, which sounded easy but took a lot of sanding to get the fit just right. I was forever test fitting the pieces and sanding a little more to achieve the perfect fit.



Then came assembling the lower decks and deck planks. This was a little easier then the last step but still hard to get the right fit. After this was done I had to install the main deck and planks. This was enjoyable as I could see the shape the ship was going to take. When I had finished assembling the deck planks I sanded them back to achieve a perfect finish. This wasn't part of the process but I wanted to do this as I'm a perfectionist and wanted the deck to be as smooth as possible.


After I was satisfied with the smoothness of the deck planks I added the deck side walls. This was also a hard step as they were straight pieces of timber but needed to be curved in order to satisfy the perfectionist and have the correct shape of the ship deck. I was forever gluing and clamping to achieve the correct curvature of the pieces. Without having a million clamps I could only do one piece at a time and this step took some time to complete.



Before I could start the next step I had to sand the ribs to match the curvature of the boat. This meant sanding the ribs to have a nice flow towards the bow and to the stern from the middle ribs towards the bow and stern. I first started with just a file and some sandpaper but then realised that my dad had a Dremel type tool that he never used. I borrowed his tool that had lots of different attachments like sandpaper to metal engravers. This made sanding different parts a lot easier and quicker and sped up this process



After the ribs were correctly angled I then started to install the side planks to form the hull of the ship. This was a tough and slow process as I had to use warm water to wet each end of the plank so I could curve it without breaking them.



It has been interesting to see the ship take shape and actually see how big this build is really going to be. I have taken about 3 months so far and and I'm only on step 10 of the build.