My Workbench

Sunday, October 6, 2013

Langton 1:1200 Scale Dutch 68 Gun 3rd Rate

Rod Langton's 68 gun Dutch 3rd rate is a beautiful model. The detail is so crisp, proportions so perfect, it was an absolute pleasure to build after so many Navwar and Davco ships. I have not yet done the research to determine what ship she might be for name, armament, etc. It is so difficult to find any information on the Napoleonic period Dutch. Sites like http://threedecks.org/ are helpful if you already know a ship's name, but trying to find ships in a class is difficult. This ship was so nice I decided to try something different and slung a boat off the port side. I am not totally pleased with the result but after cutting it loose and redoing it three times I decided to leave well enough alone. Please leave me comments on how it looks or how it could be improved. Any ideas are welcome. Here are photos of the build.

The kit


Preparing the base and setting the hull




The hull is complete

Setting the masts

Mounting the sails


Painting the base. I decided to do bases for the two frigates waiting in the shipyard while I was at it.


Standing rigging complete

Base glossed and complete
 The finished ship: (Taken without flash)









With flash (can't decide which is better)








Comments and suggestions are appreciated. Thanks for looking.

2 comments:

Richard Naylor said...

Hi,

That's a lovely model, I was tempted by Langton's Anglo-Dutch Wars ships but decided I couldn't do them justice. I think I could manage the painting side of things but am not sure I can face the rigging. I have done a few (30+) 1:3000th masted Ironclads but didn't attempt to rig them. Naval history is a life long interest of mine but I've really struggled to find playable rules (for the Ironclads especially).

I asked my wife about the boat as she used to crew tall ships when she was younger. She said that having a boat out like that could unbalance the ship as it moved - I'm not sure if that helps you or not but it might help from a what not to do perspective? She also said that the sails were set right but the rigging was less than she'd of expected but understood why when I explained the scale you were working at.

Cheers

Richard

A Miniatures Hobby Room said...

Thanks Richard. Before they built davits they would sling the boats from the foresail and mainsail yards. Your wife is right though, I have this one too far out and tried to get it closer to the side of the ship. After three tries this was the best I could manage. I may just cut this loose and try again on another ship. Thank you for commenting.

Regards,
Vol