Revell Spanish Galleon 1:450, scratched as Ottoman Galleon-Galley

Started by Acronim, December 18, 2019, 10:02:06 PM

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Acronim

Some time ago, I purchase two Revell Spanish Gallion, 1:450 Scale.



Its striking to me see a galleon with oars. some investigation clarified why:

Spain built twelve of these ships in 1567 to serve in the route America-Europe; as a wish of the King, they have oars, so they constrain some changes in the hull, increase the capacity to make space for oars and rowers, and decrease the rocking of the ship to prevent the entry of water through the porthole of the oars. This need created ships with a lot of capacity and good navigation, which marked the later designs ... and never used their oars, none of the 12; it was too complicated to place them in the use position (more info: https://blog.todoavante.es/?p=11702)



Well, What can I do with this? I'm playing a campaign based on the 7th venetian-ottoman war  ( :o nerds have not limits  ::) ) https://defiant-principality.blogspot.com/ with some friend of this forum. There is not much information about the Ottoman navy, but it could well be that this had participated:



Well, seems its drawn by Kâtip Çelebi https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K%C3%A2tip_%C3%87elebi, so maybe is more correct for the 6 th Venetian-Ottoman war, Does the truth matter if it prevents us from painting beautiful figures? bah! I will tell everyone that it is a matter of dystopia and such.

The point is that I thought there were enough similarities to try a scratch.

After cut the hull in the waterline, the second step is remove the cross, and scratch the human figures to be similar to geometric and vegetable shapes. Also added a railing in the bow, and the stern,  it is smaller so as not to hide the windows. Also added three lanterns.



Then, I cut this ugly guns and placed closed gunports instead. I ignored the instructions and introduced the oars piece from inside the hull; It fits perfectly and I think the result is much more elegant than adding it from the outside.



I did not dare to cut the turrets, so added Peter Pig crew, painted and rig... Done:





For the first time, I used black thread for the string ... a nightmare until with the job halfway I realized that the problem is that I had bought it from polyester instead of cotton! More careful next time! It didn't look so bad, despite the added difficulty.



Comparison of scales; 1:450 Peter Pig Frigate and one of the beautiful galleons 1: 600 of Minairons Miniatures. I think is a bit too big, but can be useful to play!



Greetings to all, merry christmas, etc ...!   ;)

Colonel Kilgore

Acronym - that is a lovely job you have done there. The historical explanations are also fascinating - thank you!
Simon

Sean Clark

Lovely. And a fascinating look into a historical period of which I know absolutely nothing!

martin goddard


Lluis of Minairons

Well, I'd be envy dead if Acronym's home and mine own weren't just a few miles away - so that an eventual future engagement involving that gorgeous brand new Galleass against conveniently mustered Venetian warships is more than likely in a likely short time  :P

(showing to you pictures of it, I promise. whahahahahaaa...)

Acronim

it seems that Lluís forgot his promise to show pictures... Wha, ha, ha! There is a video of a battle with this model and others of Peter Pig on Youtube, in case anyone is curious to see it in action. It's not a new video, but I think it's ok to mention it in this thread.

https://youtu.be/jwlglX5KZkQ

martin goddard

Really nice. Good piece chaps.

As an aside I suspect that kit will disappear soon.
Maybe Lluis should buy a few hundred or so, as they will be valuable soonish?
I gave up with Revell as they are a bit  "confused".

We have now about sold out of blackhawk helicopters as Revell has stopped making them. We have 3 left. But them now??

martin :)