USS Constitution’s GunPort Covers
by John
PART A. The GunPort Covers. See the photos. They were attached yesterday, after the previous post’s pics were taken.

Magnified photos show warts and all. Like crooked gunport covers, gappy bulwark rail, bent channels. and a long gun which is aiming very low.!




I have mulled regarding the carronade ropes. My intention is to install breech ropes, just winding them around the carronade knobs. The carronades are mounted on carriages with recoil slides built in. So the breech ropes can be fairly short. Installing gun positioning blocks and tackle will be overly fiddly, difficult at the scale, and look too crowded on the model so they will be left out.
PART B. The Case.
I have vacillated about this. Already the model has accumulated more dust than I like, and I know from experience that the longer the dust remains the harder it is to clean off. So a transparent cover is required.
Glass is heavy and dangerous if it breaks. Dangerous to personnel and the model.
Polycarbonate is very strong, but expensive, and apparently scratches easily if incorrectly cleaned.
Acrylic is less expensive (roughly half the cost of polycarbonate), less tough than polycarbonate (not bullet proof, but this is Oz not USA), and slightly less transparent. But on balance seems the best option.
The design has been given considerable thought and research. I drew up plans using acrylic, fluted corner columns, wooden base and framed acrylic. Then the problem was solved from a different source.
SWMBO said…”it needs to be simple, and not compete with the ship. So just a plain glass box.” So that was that. Except that it will be acrylic not glass. My thought is that the walls and roof will be 4.5mm acrylic, glued together, and lifted on and off the base in one piece. The base will be thick black plywood with rubber feet. Sitting on top of the plywood will be some 10mm black gloss acrylic. I have used black acrylic layered with black painted plywood on another model (cannon), and it looks good. If I decide to add some LED’s and batteries, the thick plywood base could house the batteries and wires.

Next decision, will I make it myself, of get it made professionally? Not yet decided. I like to have control of the process, and supervise the quality control, and it would be less expensive. Also I could buy sheets of acrylic, enough to do the 3 or 4 ship models in my possession and planned. (I have 2 model ships which I bought recently, so I can give one to each daughter eventually. And I intend to assemble the model of Pharaoh Khufu’s ship.

You have built another winner and would love to add figurines to my build eventually. The problem is I can’t sculpt and I don’t have access to a 3-D printer. Those commercial 3-D printing sites don’t have figure in my scale: 1:76.8 and even if they did, they don’t have figures made for 1812 American sailors. Then there is the cost, which for 6 or seven figures usually exceed my budget. So I guess I will wait some more. I figure I’ve got another couple of years to go on my build.
I enjoy watching document your projects.
Jon Gerson
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Hi Jon,
I bought my figures. They are 1:87 which I am told is a model railway scale. Since my Constitution is 1:93 the figures are actually a bit big. Also, they are firemen, not 1797-1812 sailors, but just there for a sense of the scale.
I envy your 1:76.8 scale. I will not build in such a small scale again. (actually, given my struggle with the rigging of Constitution, I will probably just return to guns and steam engines).
I was looking at my barrel material for the Patriot’s Point gun just yesterday. I had started the bore, but then put it aside while finishing Constitution. I expect to get back to the Dahlgren very soon!
John
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