Billing Boats 512 HMS Warrior
1:100

HMS Warrior

HMS Warrior
5 899,00 kr

Denna produkt ger dig 5899 bonuspoäng.

 I Lager
  • Betala säkert i vår webshop! Betala säkert i vår webshop!

Beskrivning

HMS Warrior, komplett, byggsats i trä.
Höjd 67,3 cm, längd 147 cm, bredd 38,8 cm.
Modellen är laserskuren Svårighetsgrad 'Expert'.

Plank-on-frame do-it-yourself Lasercut Wooden Boatkit
Scale 1:100 - Length 147 cm (57.9 inches)
Parts in wood and brass (brass etching)
Full step by step instruction and plans

Warrior was designed and built in response to an aggressive French shipbuilding programme which saw the introduction of the first iron-clad warship La Gloire designed by the brilliant naval architect Stanislas Charles Henri Dupuy de Lome.
Determined to see off this challenge to the supremacy of the Royal Navy the then First Lord of the Admiralty, Sir John Somerset Pakington, determined to build a ship so superior in terms of quality, speed, size, armament and armour that it would be inconceivable to France that she could take Britain on in a sea battle.
When commissioned by Captain the Hon. Arthur Auckland Leopold Pedro Cochrane, on August 1st 1861, Warrior was the largest warship in the world, at 9,210 tons displacement she was fully 60% larger than La Gloire. The ship underwent minor modifications after a sea trial. In June 1862, she started active service in the Channel Squadron, patrolling coastal waters and sailing to Lisbon and Gibraltar. Having introduced a revolution in naval architecture, by 1864 Warrior was superseded by faster designs, with bigger guns and thicker armour.
By 1871 she was no longer regarded as the crack ship she had once been, and her roles were downgraded to Coastguard and reserve services.
In May of 1883 her fore and main masts were found to be rotten, and not considered worth the cost of repair, Warrior was placed in the reserve, eventually converted to a floating school for the Navy and re-named Vernon III in 1904.
Put up for sale as scrap in 1924, no buyer could be found, and so, in March 1929 she left Portsmouth to be taken to Pembroke Dock and converted into a floating oil pontoon, re-named again as Oil Fuel Hulk C77. By 1978, she was the only surviving example of the 'Black Battlefleet' - the 45 iron hulls built for the Royal Navy between 1861 and 1877. Source: http://www.hmswarrior.org

Building Instructions are in:

English, French, German, Danish, Dutch, Spanish, Italian and Portuguese

Recommended Tools and Accessories for this model:
BCA001 White
BCA006 Hull Red
BCA013 Trainer Yellow
BCA015 Silver
BCA017 Clear Poly
BCA020 Satin Brown
BCA022 Flat Black
BCA036 Mahogany
Tool BB397

Specifikation

Billing Boats
512
1 st
Specifikation
Skala
1:100

Relaterade produkter