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PostPosted: Wed May 29, 2024 1:03 pm 
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FFG-7 wrote:
what is with the lines in black & red part of the hull as appears to be seam lines?


Caulk


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PostPosted: Wed May 29, 2024 1:08 pm 
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then why not paint over the caulking?


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PostPosted: Wed May 29, 2024 2:20 pm 
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Paint doesn't stick to caulk properly, over time it will crack.
The Caulk is an added layer of protection from water damage/ingress/corrosion and has to be applied over the paint.
When in the water, nobody will see it.

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PostPosted: Wed May 29, 2024 2:43 pm 
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I know what caulking does as I use it on my house & I use latex caulking not silicone caulking as the latex can be painted after a few hours. would not all the seams have caulking even when the seams are welded together or is it just certain seams have the caulking & therefore not painted?


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PostPosted: Wed May 29, 2024 11:12 pm 
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Mr DP: I suspect the marine preservation experts have their technical regimens lined in a row and this is an optimal technique for the purpose intended.


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PostPosted: Wed May 29, 2024 11:14 pm 
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who?


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 Post subject: More on Caulk
PostPosted: Thu May 30, 2024 4:11 pm 
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The caulk does at least two thing:
1. Smooths rough edges at joints
2. Seals riveted joints.

Most butts were welded. The upper two strakes were riveted with external butt straps and the next two strakes with internal butt straps.
Most seams were lapped. If the lap was greater than 3 3/4" the lap was riveted. if less, the lap was welded on both sides. Even these welded joints were caulked.


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PostPosted: Thu May 30, 2024 4:25 pm 
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thankyou. would those caulk seams be painted later when cured or left as is?


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PostPosted: Thu May 30, 2024 4:41 pm 
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FFG-7 wrote:
thankyou. would those caulk seams be painted later when cured or left as is?


Now, they will be left as is.
in ye old days, they could get painted over at repainting.


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PostPosted: Wed Jun 05, 2024 9:26 pm 
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I'm new to the forum, just spent 4 days reading through this post.

I'm going to build the 1944 USS Missouri in fancy camo, but I'll leave all the gun directors on. I'm waiting for the Pontos set as well and have some Eduard for Butt plates and Bofors as well. I won't be fixing any hull errors, as I doubt any of my audience will be versed enough in ships in general and the Iowa class in particular to know any better (nor do I have the skill and patience to fix those errors anyway). I think I will have enough with the kit and the AM!

I wanted to ask here if anyone not using 1 or two elevated "bloomers" would be willing to sell a couple to me? I'm in Canada and will gladly pay for the pieces and postage. I'd rather not buy the entire advanced set, just for those 2 parts...

Anyway, just to throw my credentials out, I've been a modeler most of my life, and I was a Sailor, and later an officer in the ROyal Norwegian Navy for a short while, I served on Mine layers, Fast Patrol Boats (MTB Hawk Class), and also Nordkapp class Coast Guard Vessel. My specialty was radio and optical communications. Nowadays I fly helicopters square in the middle of Canada.

Cheers and thanks for some amazing info!
Harald


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PostPosted: Wed Jun 05, 2024 9:44 pm 
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what scale?


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PostPosted: Thu Jun 06, 2024 4:51 pm 
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bigjimslade wrote:
USS New Jersey is painted and looks ready to rejoin the fleet. She is in remarkable condition.

Attachment:
P5260131.jpeg



I would have preferred the boot top be left at the place corresponding to her service draft. The new lowered boot top gives the ship a unrealistic, toy like proportion when viewed from afar

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PostPosted: Thu Jun 06, 2024 8:27 pm 
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chuck wrote:
I would have preferred the boot top be left at the place corresponding to her service draft. The new lowered boot top gives the ship a unrealistic, toy like proportion when viewed from afar


Chuck,

The boot topping/bottom paint has NOT changed its position since the ship was in mothballs in the late '90s. The waterline on a ship in storage is ALWAYS revised to reflect the lesser weight of the ship without stores, ammunition, or crew, etc. Here is a photo of NEW JERSEY I took in 2003 at my destroyer reunion after the ship became a museum:
Attachment:
497179-R1-25 (Large).jpg
497179-R1-25 (Large).jpg [ 106.95 KiB | Viewed 878 times ]

The waterline then is the same as now, no change. I agree it looks unrealistic, but then all museum ships carry similar traits - the Navy could care less!

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Builder's yard:
USS STODDARD (DD-566) 66-68 1:144, Various Lg Scale FC Directors
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USS NEW JERSEY (BB-62) 67-69 1:200
USN Sloop/Ship PEACOCK (1813) 1:48
ROYAL CAROLINE (1748) 1:47
AVS (1768) 1:48


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PostPosted: Thu Jun 06, 2024 9:50 pm 
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FFG-7 wrote:
what scale?


What a great question (I'm an idiot!)

I'm looking in 1/200. Got the trumpeter kit and the Pontos set is on the way.


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 07, 2024 10:06 am 
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One of the things I found interesting in Ryan Szmansky's (Sp?) clips was the explanation of all the circular cutouts along the bilge line. Was for thoroughly cleaning and transitioning away from the Bunker Crude. The Japanese fleet was kept near TawiTawi for a good portion of the war just so they could essentially pump crude aboard , fuel oil becoming increasingly a limitation as the war wore on.


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 07, 2024 8:38 pm 
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Fliger747 wrote:
One of the things I found interesting in Ryan Szmansky's (Sp?) clips was the explanation of all the circular cutouts along the bilge line. Was for thoroughly cleaning and transitioning away from the Bunker Crude. The Japanese fleet was kept near TawiTawi for a good portion of the war just so they could essentially pump crude aboard , fuel oil becoming increasingly a limitation as the war wore on.


The Iowas were converted to burn “Navy distillate” (kerosine) during their recommissioning in the 1980s. The reason being, the rest of the fleet, gas turbine powered, burned distillate. No fuel handling systems remained to deal with bunker fuel, which, as pointed out, is unrefined crude oil. Even heated, bunker fuel is like tar, cleaning the tanks must have been an ugly job.


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PostPosted: Sat Jun 08, 2024 7:21 pm 
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William Smallshaw wrote:
Fliger747 wrote:
Even heated, bunker fuel is like tar, cleaning the tanks must have been an ugly job.


Holes were cut in the hull to clean out the tanks during the switch.


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PostPosted: Wed Sep 04, 2024 6:13 pm 
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I just visited the Wisconsin over the Labor Day weekend and I got the Atlantis model in the gift shop. I want to make the model look like a modernized Iowa (either Wisconsin or New Jersey). While I think I could take care of the rest, my main problem would be the ABL's. Does anyone make them in the 1/535 scale (Model Monkey says he is completely booked on new projects to 2026)? Conversely, does anyone know where could I find the STL files to have the 3D printed?


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PostPosted: Wed Sep 04, 2024 7:19 pm 
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at that scale, you can make the abl out of solid square tube plastic or similar. I am going to redo the 1 I made back in the 90's using that same Revell model before I had the plans that I now have of that ship.
BB-62 USS New Jersey Booklet of General Plans (1984) https://archive.org/details/bb62bogp1984
https://archive.org/details/ship-design ... collection


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PostPosted: Wed Sep 04, 2024 7:31 pm 
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FFG-7 wrote:
at that scale, you can make the abl out of solid square tube plastic or similar. I am going to redo the 1 I made back in the 90's using that same Revell model before I had the plans that I now have of that ship.
BB-62 USS New Jersey Booklet of General Plans (1984) https://archive.org/details/bb62bogp1984
https://archive.org/details/ship-design ... collection


I've been looking for the booklet on one of the modernized ships.... thanks!

How would you go about in making the launchers?


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