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A big help is the excellent set of plans by Rössler & Köhler that provides detailed drawings of almost every piece of external equipment. Highly recommended...
A big help is the excellent set of plans by Rössler & Köhler that provides detailed drawings of almost every piece of external equipment. Highly recommended...
There is the "Vom Original zum Modell" about the XXIII that contains pages with the above plans and there is alos a more extensive book about the XXIII that contains lots usefull info, e.g. th water piping plans, electric plans, ventilation plans....I used it extensively for the interior of my model.
The Bronco kit provides a nice basis for building a proper model right out of the box. But in many cases, the kit designers have sacrificed details for the ease of assembly. For example the deck. Every XXIII kit I know displays the boat with a wooden deck in front of the sail. Theses decks existed bit were only installed at port. For operation, these decks were removed and then only two welded-on steel rails provided a rest of footing on the front of the boat. I want to display the boat without the deck in operation mode. Unfortunately the kit has recesses in the bow section to help installing the deck. Good for easy assembly but without deck simply wrong. So the recesses had to go. I cut strips of 0,5 mm thick styrene sheet and glued them into the recesses. Once dried I filed them into shape. Filling and consequent wet sanding....recesses are gone. Next fix will be the loading hatch for the batteries.
I continued with correcting the battery loading hatch. In the original there was a rectangular hatch in front of the sail, that was screwed shut by numerous bolts and that was protected against damage by encasing it in a welded housing. The housing of the kit is O.K., but the hatch itself is too large and the bolts are indicated by dices. Not good enough. So I cut the hatch part out of the housing. Prior, I marked the position of the housing on the hull, as the now missing hath also provided the positioning. The housing has two gaps (front, rear) that don't belong there (hidden by the wood deck when built out of the box). I filled those using styrene sheets, filled and sanded the gaps. Then I adjusted the size of the hatch opening again using styrene and finally I glued the 3D-printed hatch with bolts in its position. Better....
Then I installed the grating that protects the bow vent valve (missing in the kit), The grating is again a 3D-printed part. I removed some material below to give the whole affair some depth.
Finnaly I installed the anti skid rails on the bow section. I made them from 1 x 1 mm^2 square styrene rods.
Could be space issues.....here's the internal structure of the ballast tank. The round plate in the upper middle ist the valve. I guess there was just not enough room in the middle. of the roof of the tank. That said, the valve is off center, but reaches over the center line, so the tank can be vented completely.
That was m,y guess too. Fixing points.....that will go on as well, but at the stage when I add the final fine details. In the moment I'm filling and sanding the keel. Too much danger to rip stuff off.
Note this Type XXIII with short intermittent deck rail.
could it be that the wooden deck in the Bronco kit was based off this particular sub? You could just cut off the wood grate and use the rails in the kit.
These boats were made at the end of the war when resources became increasingly scarce and time for manufacturing also became shorter and shorter. Looking at many photos I came to the conclusion that no two boats were the same. Antennas, steps, skid rails, location of limber, hatch for pressure tight compartment, all that could be different. So I basically work on the version that later on became U-Hecht (S 170), the first sub of the Bundesmarine (the German Federal Navy).
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