A 1/13th scale model of a sail boat
Tallulah is a "metric inch" model of the "Weekender" built from the actual full size plans purchased fromStevenson Projects
I decided to make a study model of the Weekender before building the full sized boat. The study model quickly evolved into a remote control pond yacht, which is what you see here.
Metric Inch Scale
19ft * 12in/ft * 1in/2.54cm * 10/1 (dm as in) * 1/50scale = 17.95in
( 17.95in / 19ft ) / 12in/ft = 1/12.7scale ~ 1/13th
Why the funky scale? The dimensions on the Weekender plans are given in inches and fractions of inches, not the feet, inches, and fractions usually marked on an English architectural rule. Using a Metric rule eliminates converting measurements given in lots-of-inches to feet and inches. For instance, the 154 & 3/8ths inches of length along the top of the keel reads directly off the 50:1 metric decimeter scale as 154.375 decimeters. No mind-bending error-prone mental gymnastics are required to find the correct mark. By comparison, 154 & 3/8ths inches would be 12 feet, 10 & 3/8ths inches on a 1/12 scale English rule.
Construction
The cabin roof was constructed as a sandwich, with curved deck beams glued to a flat bottom base. After theses photos were taken, two layers of the 1/16th birch plywood were laminated to the top of the deck beams. The resulting laminated top is lightweight and very stiff, and snaps into place on top of the cabin sides.
The green mat forming the background in most of the photos is one of the wife's self-healing sewing/cutting mats manufactured by Olfa, which is conveniently marked in a one inch square grid. This is a great surface to cut small parts on using a hobby knife as the plastic is just grippy enough to prevent the parts from moving.
R/C Conversion
The steering cable was fashioned from fishing line running in a stiff nylon sleeve (from an airplane control rod) to form a cable guide ala bicycle brake cables. Warming the nylon sleeve with a heat gun or boiling the sleeve in water softens the thermoplastic nylon enough to allow permanent reshaping. The pull-pull steering cable leads from the servo arm athwart-ship to the port cable guide where it is turned 90 degrees to run under the port cockpit seats, and into the lazarette, where it is turned another 90 degrees, leaves the guide, and is secured to the end of the tiller. The cable then continues on to the starboard side to complete the circle back to the servo arm through a mirror image cable guide.
The mahogany rudder box turns on gudgeons and pintles made from a nylon aircraft hinge with a removable hinge pin. The rudder blade pivots just like on the real Weekender to avoid damage during an accidental grounding.
Sails and Rigging
The nylon cloth used for the sails came embossed with a fine square grid pattern, which made measuring and cutting the panels a snap, and helped tremendously in tapering the seams to give proper draft to the sails. The seams were assembled as simple S-fold lap joints with the inside of the seam overlap painted with diluted Elmer's white glue. Hitting the seam with a warm iron set the thinned glue, which held the cloth together for sewing. The diluted glue in the seams also performed like starch, giving mild stiffness to the finished sails for when Tallulah sits on display upon the mantle in the family room.
Stays, sheets and halyards are made of a manila colored extra heavy three strand cotton yarn from the embroidery section of the local fabric store. The running rigging turns through brass blocks manufactured by Proctor Enterprises.
Launch day!
Here we find Tallulah sitting in her cradle on the boat ramp of Lake Cosman awaiting her first taste of the big water.
My original plan was to adjust her trim with some lead ballast on the rear of the cockpit floor, but she had so little freeboard that I decided to just sail her as is. At launching time, I guessed that I would eventually have to cut the four cell battery apart and place two cells under each of the cockpit seats.
Tacking was a breeze, and most likely helped by the extreme weather helm induced by the nose-down trim, which is clearly visible in these photos. Tacking was also eased by the ability to ease the Jib sheet independantly from the Main, which helps the boat weather-vane quickly into the wind. Pushing the left stick forward to slacken the Jib sheet and right stick over hard to swing the rudder starts the turn. As the bow swings through the wind, pulling the left stick back retrims the Jib for the new course.
If anybody else wants to try an RC Weekender, I would suggest doubling the size of the model and executing the lofting in 1/6th scale, or use the 25:1 side of the metric rule for 1/6.35th scale. Doubling the length, width, and depth increases the displacement of the model hull by a factor of eight, so that 4000 scale pounds of radio gear should reduce to about 500 scale pounds, which is a much more realistic load for a Weekender hull. The resulting larger sized hull should allow the servos to be mounted on their sides, which will lower their center of gravity significantly and improve the stability of the model. The expanded hull would also leave room for installing a small six volt airplane fuel pump to be controlled with a fourth RC channel via a proportional electric speed controller. Connecting the input side of the pump to a tube drilled forward and downward through the center of the keel, and the output side to a tube drilled downward and backward through the keel to exit a little in front of the rudder, will result in a mini jet-drive to allow maneuvering thrust should the wind fail altogether.
Folding Rig
This last photo was stolen from the Stevenson Projects web site and shows Mike setting up the mast on the full scale Weekender. Click (here) to go to theStevenson Projects Pocket Yachts page. I have watched skippers at the local boat ramp waste most of an hour setting up similar sized rigs. With the full sized Weekender, I expect to be in the water and sailing in less than 15 minutes.
My appologies for the execution of the photography, as it is not my best work. I was shooting the pictures with a Minolta 400si on a mini tripod located on a sloping concrete boat ramp and did not notice that the horizon is not always level in the outdoor shots. I guess the excitement of launch day was not proportional to the scale of the model !!!
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