Wire cutters (for cutting fine wire and strip metal)
My response regarding tools was primarily for the "minimum" needs,
obviously addressing hand tools. There is also one
power tool that I keep on my minimum
list, for models as well as large woodworking projects. That is the
band saw. I have never been without one, and never will. To me it is
the most useful power tool in any shop, for fancy cuts, stripping, or
just plain cutting a piece of scrap wood in half.
For model work, a small band saw is desirable. I had been using a
large Sears saw up to a few years ago. However, I bought a speed
reducer for it, and now use it exclusively for cutting metal. Of course,
you can change the reducer, and change the blade for wood cutting.
But I'm too old for wasting that much time. I decided to invest in a small
model band saw.
Well, Micro Mark had just advertised a new Black and Decker band
saw for the modeler. I jumped at it. But boy was I disappointed. This
was a big piece of junk. I think it had a wooden or rock gear drive. It
was so noisy you could not believe it. It was also not accurate, would
not line up, and the case and other parts pure trash. I was not happy
that Micro Mark sold such a thing. Well, maybe they got the word too,
because they soon dumped it, or maybe B&D did.
What I have now, and good old Micro Mark is selling it also, is the
new Delta 8 inch band saw. This is one dreamboat. It is so quiet you
can hardly hear it running. Very accurate and the case and all parts are
of excellent metal and machined very well. It cuts smooth as silk. I
generally use a 1/8" blade which is very thin. You can get this saw for
a song at the big stores like Home Depot, and some mail order.
As a model band saw, cutting small stuff, I added a new plastic
laminate table on top of the metal table. Saw a slit to the center with
the blade and you have a nice table without the big hole around the
blade.
{Ben Lankford}
While I now have a pretty good stable of power tools, I have
scratchbuilt hulls using a coping saw. While a jig saw certainly
makes life easier, it is not absolutely essential. I used thinner lifts,
and these actually make shaping the hull easier anyway, although it
is more work cutting more layers.
Of course, that may require re-lofting the waterlines, but that doesn't
take more than a couple of hours.
Of course, this requires that the hull be built bread-and- butter, but I
always do that anyway. Wood gets expensive when you want a
single large block.
The thing I like about scratch building is that I can pick my own scale,
and can build any ship I want, not just the ones that are kitted.
{Don Stauffer}
The only power tool I have is my Dremel! No real workbench, no large
saws, not many tools bigger than an Exacto, I borrowed a table saw
& other tools at a friend's house to do the first cuts on the
Incomparable hull) That's why I don't scratchbuild more than
I do. Kits, even inaccurate ones, require far fewer facilities, and far
less time to make into an acceptable model.
{David R. Wells}
The producers of model kits supply wood and metal parts for a
completed kit of average detail. A "good" kit will have plans which
allow the dedicated and experienced modeler ample scope for adding
more detail. Generally, you have to supply some materials yourself.
I think you will add more tools and materials to your workshop with
each kit you build.
{Septimus}
One of the nicest and most accurate hand tools to use in woodworking
is a good block plane. One of the earlier messages mentioned using a
razor plane, which uses removable blades that look like single or
double edged razor blades. I used one for years, until the special
blades it used became unavailable. Then I checked up on "traditional"
planes and now am much happier. Here are the basic steps:
-
Get an old miniature plane in restorable shape. What you are
looking for is something like a
Stanley 100
or
Stanley 101. I prefer the 100, because I find the "squirrel tail"
handle to be more comfortable and to give me more control.
They are fairly rare and significantly more expensive than the
101's. You should be able to get a decent 101 off of eBay for
between $20 and $40. A lot of time people selling them don't
know what they are, so they list them as "toy plane," "little block
plane," "funny little plane," etc. As always on eBay, patience,
persistence, and creativity with the search engine pays off.
There were similar models made by both Millers Falls and
Sargent. Look for one whose description says "minor rust" or "no
pitting." If you're buying it to use, you don't really care what
shape the japanning (the baked enamel) is in, but collectors do,
so that's where the bargains lie. Look carefully at the picture to
make sure the body of the plane is a casting and not the cheap
stamped ones sold by Stanley when they started going downhill.
In general, the older it looks the better the steel in the blade will
be.
-
Clean off the rust with your favorite rust remover and steel wool.
-
Sharpen the blade. The now-legendary
"scary sharp"
system really works. This involves using fine grades of abrasive
paper glued to a flat (glass or marble) surface. I found that for
small blades you don't really have to glue the paper down, and
using just three grits (400, 600, and 1500) works just fine. (Fine
grit wet or dry paper is available at auto supply stores). You'll
need a rolling jig to hold the blade at the right angle; look at the
full-size ones at a hardware store, then make a miniature out of a
block of wood, some wing nuts, and a couple of 1" shower curtain
rollers from the hardware gizmo display. I use a marble base
from a junked desk pen set for my flat; you can also get marble
scraps cheap from monument places. Having a good reference
flat is useful for other things as well. If the blade is in really
rough shape you may have to start with 220 to grind it to shape
then go down through the grits until you get a mirror surface
Watch how you test it with your finger -- it will indeed bescary sharp.
-
Lap the sole. The bottom of the plane will almost certainly have
warped a little with age, and is probably scratched to boot. Using
the same abrasive paper and flat surface, rub in a figure eight
pattern until the sole is flat. You can see this develop in the
pattern of scratches as you go.
-
"Tune" the plane. This involves getting the blade aligned to the
sole and sticking out just a few thousands of an inch. The
100/101s don't have the fancy threaded adjustments of the
bigger planes, so this looks tricky at first. Actually it's easy. Get
some shim stock of varying thickness. Lay the plane on your
flat surface with a piece of shim under the nose, which will mean
there is a tiny angle between the sole and the surface. Slide the
blade in place, letting its edge lie on the surface. Tighten the
locking screw and take a trial cut. Adjust depth by changing the
thickness of the shim stock, moving the shim in or out, or both.
-
Admire your work. You should be able to cut the tiniest of
shavings off bass or spruce. I "scary sharp" my larger (old)
Millers Falls block plane, and I can tune it to cut a .001 shaving
the length of a six foot long sitka spruce mast. With one of these
you'll learn the manifold advantages of being able to shave off
just what you want, flat and smooth, without the frustration and
rounded edges you get when you play with rasps and sandpaper.
{Earl Boebert}
I've been building models for years, and I like tools, so I collect them. The
hard part is deciding which represent a reasonable subset. The list below is
for scratch building in 3/8" = 1'-0" scale. Some items are superfluous to
building from a kit
I get a lot of use out of my Dremel tool using the cut-off disks that come 25
or so to a pack. It does a fine job of cutting piano wire and rounding the
ends. I don't use it much for shaping wood tho.
A jigsaw and a combo belt/disk sander both get a lot of use.
I tend to leave models in natural wood, so my "finishing" is mainly sealing and
varnishing
The scale of 3/8" = 1' 0" that I use has several advantages. It's 1:32, so a
pocket ruler will read inches directly. It's small enough that materials are
easy to find and handle, but large enough that most full scale techniques are
feasible.
The following is a good start on a tool collection:
- sturdy, well lit work surface -- I use a surplus steel office desk
- moveable light source -- halogen would probably be an improvement over mine
- magnifier on a stand -- I rigged mine from an old gooseneck lamp and a cheap
magnifying glass, connected by a photography ball & socket.
- various other magnifiers depending on how old your eyeballs are -- I use several
- bench pin (jeweler's) -- I made mine out of a piece of 1x4 and bolted it to the
desk top with a 1/4-20 bolt sunk beneath the surface -- I tapped the desktop to
accept the bolt -- these are expendable, but they last several years
- 12" 1x4 of fairly hard wood for cutting and sanding on -- yes, I have one of
the fancy pieces of vinyl, but I can clamp a piece of basswood to the 1x4, use
my steel ruler (also clamped) as a cutting guide, and convert a piece of
1/32" basswood into scale 1x4s quickly. The vinyl doesn't clamp up well.
- #1 X-acto knife with #11 & #17 blades (the #17 is the 1/4" chisel) -- actually,
there's an improved handle available with the knurled part at the opposite end
from the blade and a little hex ferrule which keeps it from rolling -- I have
a scalpel too, but it's not worth it
- 6" Stanley block plane, # H102 it's 1-1/2" wide, cheap with a sheet metal sole,
and it does a fantastic job, both on models and on full size boats
- hard Arkansas stone for sharpening
- X-acto back saw
- 6" x 16" piece of Homosote to represent your building floor - talk to a model
railroader
- a half dozen or so concrete nails to grind into special chisels and punches --
the square, incredibly hard ones
- architectural scale with a 3/8" = 1' scale
- scraper -- somewhere I have a real, Stanley, cabinet scraper, but usually I use
the back of an X-acto knife, the edge of a file whose teeth I ground off, or
my steel pocket ruler
- combination square, 12"
- adjustable 4" square
- 12" steel ruler (the markings don't matter, the straight edge does)
- steel dressmaker pins
- files of all sizes including a set of needle files, #2 cut is best -- it's also
nice to have #4 in barrette, round, and diamond sections
- shoemaker's rasp -- also great for the full scale boat
- drafting dividers and compasses
- wooden clothespins, reversed -- 8 or more (clamping)
- clamps -- I like the sliding kind as well as the cast, 2" size – no boatbuilder
ever had too many clamps
- wire coat hangers for making clamping devices
- split rings cut from PVC pipe for clamping
- hunks of steel for use as anvils and weights, preferably hardened and ground
smooth like old lathe tool holders
- diagonal cutting pliers
- Sear's "Handy Cut" or "Acu-Cut" cutter
- pliers, 4": needle nose w/teeth and w/o teeth, chain nose, round nose, flat nose
- 6" needlenose pliers
- jeweler's ring clamp
- pin vises
- drills, #61 thru #80
- drills, 1/16 thru 1/4"
- egg beater style drill
- jeweler's saw and collection of blades -- after you develop the skill they only
break every five minutes -- hang it up
- tweezers on a stand (a third hand)
- forceps or hemostats
- small ball-pein hammer, 1 oz
- dental probes -- explorers, amalgam tamping tool, chisel, scrapers
- sandpaper -- 100 grit to 600 grit
- vise, modelers
- vise, drill press, non-tilting -- shim jaws to close true
- soldering stuff -- deliberately vague because I don't know how far into the
making of metal fittings you want to go -- I like that part, and get carried
away
- all kinds of small pieces of scrap metal and tubing - the hobby stores sell it,
but it can add up
{Roger Derby}
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