by mconnelley » Thu Oct 09, 2025 3:26 pm
I've installed the yardarms on Nevada and Arizona. I first airbrushed them with a light gray primer before folding them, so that we wouldn't see shiny brass on the inside after it's folded. Folding was kind of tricky, to keep the sides flat and the edges sharp and not end up with some weird tube.
There is also the problem of alignment. The goal is to keep the narrow side down (i.e. get the roll angle right), get the two of them level with the fight top, and with the right 'V' angle, and have the yardarms on Nevada and Arizona identical. So I made a simple jig, that's just a piece of plastic card with a notch cut out that allows the foremast to hang on the bottom of the foretop. I drew two lines on the card where I want the yardarms to be. When the foremast is hanging in the jig, the jig gets the position (x,y,z) of the yardarm correct, helps to get the root right, and get the angle between the two correct.
Cheers
Mike
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I've installed the yardarms on Nevada and Arizona. I first airbrushed them with a light gray primer before folding them, so that we wouldn't see shiny brass on the inside after it's folded. Folding was kind of tricky, to keep the sides flat and the edges sharp and not end up with some weird tube.
There is also the problem of alignment. The goal is to keep the narrow side down (i.e. get the roll angle right), get the two of them level with the fight top, and with the right 'V' angle, and have the yardarms on Nevada and Arizona identical. So I made a simple jig, that's just a piece of plastic card with a notch cut out that allows the foremast to hang on the bottom of the foretop. I drew two lines on the card where I want the yardarms to be. When the foremast is hanging in the jig, the jig gets the position (x,y,z) of the yardarm correct, helps to get the root right, and get the angle between the two correct.
Cheers
Mike