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Subject: 
Re: MOC: First World War German Dreadnought: SMS Friedrich der Grosse
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.build, lugnet.build.sculpture, lugnet.boats, lugnet.pirates
Date: 
Mon, 27 Aug 2001 21:33:49 GMT
Viewed: 
8735 times
  
In lugnet.build, Richard Parsons writes:
In lugnet.build, Lindsay Frederick Braun writes:

  I built a little boat.

  http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~lfbraun/Friedrich-der-Grosse.html

Just stupendous Lindsay.

The snot-wise approach to hull design has worked a treat, the turrets
(always my worry) are wonderful, and the detail around the superstructure is
glorious.

   Hey, thanks!  It's no pagoda--that'll have to wait for another
   day--but I'm partial to it as well.  I thought you'd also appreciate
   that little front-page backstory.  ;)

I think another day in the sun for the HMS Valhalla and HMS Indescribable,
and then it will be time to send them off to the breakers, and build
someting truly capital.  Must drag out my books and start looking for
something appropriately WWI from the Royal or Royal Australian navies.  Not
sure that Australia ever really had much in the way ships to threaten FdG,
but there has got to be away to restore security in the Pacific.  Actually,
maybe the best idea is to go back to one of the original British aircraft
carriers.

   If you want to get technical, the battlecruiser _Australia_, of
   the relatively unfortunate _Indefatigable_ class, was paid for by
   Australia (just as _New Zealand_ was paid for by NZ), and was thus
   placed at the disposal of Australia at the outbreak of war--this
   especially so, given that Graf Spee was busily causing mayhem in
   the Pacific at that time.  _Australia_ was one of the very few
   ships Spee really and truly feared, because he couldn't outrun
   it *and* couldn't outfight it.

   HMAS Australia was a pioneer in several ways--in 1917 she tested
   a flying-off platform for large warships at sea, and she was also
   IIRC the first "dreadnought" on permanent Imperial service.  But
   alas, the Washington naval treaty got her, and she was taken out
   of service in 1921 and scuttled off Sydney in 1924, where the
   remanants of her wreckage remains to this day.

   So, there you go!

My NLSO is already concerned about where the slips for this new ship will be
located in the house....

   Make direct comparisons between the size of the NLSO and the size
   of the ship.  They just *love* that.

   best

   LFB



Message has 1 Reply:
  Re: MOC: First World War German Dreadnought: SMS Friedrich der Grosse
 
(...) Mmmm. Research is pointing in the same direction. Either HMAS Australia (and let's not talk about the pushing and shoving with the New Zealand which kept her out of Jutland - she may have suffered the same fate as Indefatigable...), or perhaps (...) (23 years ago, 28-Aug-01, to lugnet.build, lugnet.build.sculpture, lugnet.boats, lugnet.pirates)

Message is in Reply To:
  Re: MOC: First World War German Dreadnought: SMS Friedrich der Grosse
 
(...) Just stupendous Lindsay. The snot-wise approach to hull design has worked a treat, the turrets (always my worry) are wonderful, and the detail around the superstructure is glorious. I think another day in the sun for the HMS Valhalla and HMS (...) (23 years ago, 26-Aug-01, to lugnet.build, lugnet.build.sculpture, lugnet.boats, lugnet.pirates)

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