Model Boat Mayhem

The Shipyard ( Dry Dock ): Builds & Questions => Steam => Topic started by: jtbyte on October 18, 2015, 12:33:21 pm

Title: BOSPHORUS STEAMER
Post by: jtbyte on October 18, 2015, 12:33:21 pm
 Bosphorus Paddle Steamer built by Messrs. Green in the mid 1850’s.   She was 165 feet in length and 21 feet in beam.  Her draught was 5 feet.  Another really nice looking vessel which would make a great model.   
I spent a few years working in Turkey during the mid 1980’s and often sat in the café’s under Galata Bridge, which spanned the Golden Horn, watching the ferries weaving in and out of each other.  I can just imagine what these old steamers would have looked and sounded like.

Title: Re: BOSPHORUS STEAMER
Post by: GreenSteam on October 27, 2016, 02:50:11 pm
Bosphorus Paddle Steamer built by Messrs. Green in the mid 1850’s.   She was 165 feet in length and 21 feet in beam.  Her draught was 5 feet.  Another really nice looking vessel which would make a great model.   
I spent a few years working in Turkey during the mid 1980’s and often sat in the café’s under Galata Bridge, which spanned the Golden Horn, watching the ferries weaving in and out of each other.  I can just imagine what these old steamers would have looked and sounded like.

Beautiful boat--certainly evokes an entirely different time, foreign to most (including me).  But I'd love to see it built!

Thanks for posting.
Title: Re: BOSPHORUS STEAMER
Post by: Colin Bishop on October 27, 2016, 03:43:23 pm
Here is something similar preserved in New England. I think you can get plans of her.

Colin

Title: Re: BOSPHORUS STEAMER
Post by: Netleyned on October 27, 2016, 04:01:13 pm
That is the way to preserve old ships.
Easier to maintain than having them
afloat with the attendant costs of
Docking to attend to hull corrosion.
The loss of the Lincoln Castle paddler
was down to a hull rotted and no dock
available for repair.


Ned
Title: Re: BOSPHORUS STEAMER
Post by: Colin Bishop on October 27, 2016, 04:19:51 pm
Yes Ned, for smaller vessels that is certainly the answer provided you can get them ashore to a suitable site. Ticonderoga was moved two miles inland to the extraordinary Shelburne Museum in Vermont. https://shelburnemuseum.org/collection/steamboat-ticonderoga/

She is in absolutely pristine condition.

Colin