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Hi Jan,
Maybe this winch was the piece I found on deck of a Revell model of the clipper Thermopylae I made long time ago (at times when PCs were still science fiction). Maybe I should read some more literature about it ... I cannot remember Thermopylae ever being fitted with brace winches unless they were fitted at a later date when in the hands og the Portuguese and used as a sail training ship, the jarvis winch was only used on the big square riggers like Pommern, Preussen and others. BTW: I heard some roumors that there are plans to rebuild the Thermopylae again in the UK. I have heard nothing of this but we do get the odd strange rumour now and then, there is a project under developement to recreate the Titanic as a cruise ship, it will look much like the original on the outside but totally different on the inside and bigger I believe, Cunard has two new liners coming into service over the next two years, Queen Mary 2 and Queen Victoria. QM2 has just had a bad start with 15 people being killed when they fell 20 mtrs into the dry dock when a gangway gave way, she is due for her maiden voyage in early next year and at around 150,000 tons is the biggest liner ever built, QV is still fitting out ready for launch but she is only half the size or thereabouts at 85,000 tons, still bigger than the old QE and 30,000 tons heavier than the QE2. And would it be realistic to hope for ? It would be quite expensive to do ... Thermopylae was well documented and good plans are available for her in her tea trade days from a couple of sources, one was David MacGregor Plans but David died a few weeks back so what will happen to his plans business I dont know, if she was reconstructed it would probably be with a steel hull and as a sail training ship. Most might think it would be enough to preserve the Cutty Sark ... Problem with the Sark is that she cant be used for sail training, her hull is quite weak now and has had strengthening carried out during her major overhaul that has been going on for over 10 years now, her masts do not sit on the keel anymore, they sit on steel pins that pass straight through the keel into the concrete underneath to take the weight off her hull. The old lady really is becoming quite fragile these days so can never be expected to take to the water again, she would have to be ballasted to keep her up straight and her hull just wouldnt stand loading of 120 tons of ballast, regards, Terry |
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