Does anyone have any tips on how to make a historical boat, AKA the santa maria out of cardboard? - cardboard boat blueprints
Santa Maria is the ship of Christopher Columbus, I have a project, and I build the boat entirely out of cardboard. I also have good plans. My science teacher is crazy.
Saturday, February 6, 2010
Cardboard Boat Blueprints Does Anyone Have Any Tips On How To Make A Historical Boat, AKA The Santa Maria Out Of Cardboard?
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In fact, it is a project that I love. You're right. Blueprints would be a real help. In fact, trial and error without it. But the wood without buying a kit for home, must improvise.
The first step is to get to know so much about the Santa Maria as possible. In fact, I believe that not much is known about the actual ship.
It is a replica of Columbus, Ohio. Bizaar species since Columbus is not in the ocean. Enter the global warming for several years and it could be.
Here is a link to the answer. However, it is built up something of a concept and may not be accurate. But given enough to do a good job.
In relation to construction. I can do a few tips to help it. The key is to first build a partition board helmet and internal Buld ground. This is structured as follows. Take a piece of hard cardboard and cut off the keel. The keel is a verticle piece is approximately 3 / 4 inches wide and as long as you will be your model. It shOuld quite thick. At least 1 / 8 inch. You can do this by making two pieces of cardboard. If the scale ranges from 1 inch / 4 = 1 foot and then the keel is 18 inches long at the base. A 1 / 8 inch = 1 foot 9 inches at the base (so small). 1 / 4 inch = 1 F Keel have both the stern of the boat before the bridge, so that the tables have a final point connection. The stern face, back as a table that corresponds to the side walls. In the walls of the keel a distance of 2 cm. You need thick in 1 / 8 inch. By adding a 1 / 2 1 / 8 slot in the bottom of the screen, which slides on the keel and the adhesive is not moving. Each stamp must be in the form of hull shape when he studied in the keel. It is a piece of cardboard on which you have to make the fuselage. His goal is to maintain the rigidity of the hull.
Here are some links to pictures from the platform of the model in Columbus, OH, and some photos. Link 2 is one of the pieces of a kit. willa real picture of how the pieces should fit.
http://www.santamaria.org/virtualship/fa ...
http://www.bestscalemodels.com/santamari ...
In the last link in the note, in particular sections of the keel and Exit 3, sections of the road down.
Now take the city at the end, it is better to cut the pieces separately in thin strips of the fuselage and the tail of each band. Do not use superglue. The helmet should be the case a little thinner, but not too thin. You want a hard helmet when you're done. The housing is made of the same. To see the actual appearance of tables to make use cream dark box and add to it before you can make a pencil to draw a fine line and use a ruler to draw lines which appear to run parallel to the parts to 1 / 8 inch intervals as tables. Also on the cover.
I do not know how they make cardboard masks. Screws. I suppose you could roll on the use of paper, spread a layer of adhesive on one side, then in a tube-like sound. To determine the mask, cut a small footprint on the keel, where the seat and paste masks a flat piece into the slot as the basis for each pole. Making the parade ground just like the masks. It would be better to use the material for sails. The document will not be real. Use a thin brown pencil to draw lines indicate sales, where pieces of fabric sewn together. The sails were sewn piece of fabric verticle not horizontal. You can use up brown cable, so that the rows of loops and running rigging. The black wire ropes must be heavier than the rigging supporting the mask and it was leveled.
Look! marecles not expect the teacher. And you have 2 months time, either in whole. What is the best we can. The 2 links you should have a good idea of how to proceed.
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