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A lovely looking model Andy - More details please....Who built it, what size/scale is it, is it steam powered?
Hi I'm Alan Pollock and I built the model of Charlotte Dundas posted by Andy. I built it from information which Falkirk museum hold on the boat. It was originally built in Grangemouth in 1803 and no real plans of the boat exist - only sketches which all vary in the arrangement of the boiler/engine. She is electrically powered - I originally thought of trying to build a steam engine however my limited skill in turning combined with the feeling that a slow running single cylinder double acting engine would stick at TDC without a very heavy flywheel built into the paddle. She is 40inches long by 11 inches beam, built to a scale of about 1:17.The original was probably a converted canal barge so the hull of the model is basically just a rectangular plywood box with a double 'keel' attached at the stern between which the paddle runs and a rounded bit at the bow attached to the box. Because of the hull shape the displacement is about 35 lbs - that's why she is so stable in the water. She took about three years on/off to build as I kept modifying my original ideas and adding on bits as they occurred to me. I do have an outline drawing of the boat, done after it was finally completed (in Autocad format 182Kb) which I would e-mail to you if you (or anybody else) want it.Alan
Hi Stu - I like your little puffer, very fond of them , they were built and ran on the Forth & Clyde Canal very close to where I live. Not sure what you want regarding the engine - is it a diagram of the Charlotte Dundas engine or a puffer engine?Alan