Building the french suffren sna
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Printed a pair overnight, using my 'easy bake oven' produced these this morning - print time 8 hours 13 minutes. These printers never cease to amaze me. Looks like they need sanding? Nope! They will get their final UV sun bath as soon as the sun comes up.
All these propulsor evolutions have a hole for a hex locking nut. I will make a tiny discrete hole in the shroud along its bottom out of view for slim hex wrench. Will drill hole once propulsor final positioning finalized.
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While DDS design finishes, completing the Suffern's swiveling pump jet. In the middle side view of propulsor with its stainless steel 4 mm shaft, this is more a reference photo for me so I can remember if I ever do maintenance I can reinstall the correct number of bearings and washer spacers. The large disk (washer) buts up against the stern and acts as a discrete pivoting thrust block. Simple, works great. Added a hole along bottom centerline to insert an Allen wrench to easily tighten prop to shaft.
To remove or attach, use allen wrench to pull the threaded allen pins from the rudder posts, detach the flexible coupling from the drive shaft, slide the shroud and prop off stern. Insert allen wrench loosen prop on shaft...gently slide the shaft partially out leaving a 1/4 inch extending like in photo, pull out shaft that extends into the tail cone. Tip the prop to remove around the lower rudder post. Reverse steps tio replace.
How the real pump jet actually really looks is unknown and don't care to know thank you very much. lol. I decided on 12 turning blades It probably has a primary number blade count likely on the real ones. Made blade tip clearances minimal. We are using a post swirl design instead of a pre Swirl design which the fixed stators are in front of the propulsor - like all known existing PJs around the world. (the Mk 48 Torpedo uses a post swirl). However, the pre swirl is excellent for facilitating the swivel function I desired and is simple and sturdy. In the water, It will still looks scale nuff.. Now the shroud doesn't restrain model turning but the reverse greatly enhancing it. Bob Martin has since made his own design with a swiveling PJ accessory for his 1/72 scale Virginia kits
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Printing it up. The DDS is thin; I am making a thicker walled version. The black 'landing tracked platform' (my term not sure of its correct name) for landing the French SWUV was made in the morning while the printer did its thing.
Made it the old-fashioned way using scrap printed resin parts, a disk sander, some brass tubing, Bondo and my hand piece with some added sheet styrene. It is hollow and free flooding too, both will be secured on deck eventually with some Magnets from Bob Martin's Nautilus works.
Comparing the French DDS to the American DDS, the US Navy doesn't seem to need a landing platform, the divers open the hatch and pullout a telescoping track on wheeled legs. But maybe the French one has more than it shows. Suspect the French DDS has telescoping tracks too still but connecting the landing platform to roll the SWUV in and out of the shelter..
The Suffren herself is so darn sleek, the DDS is a startling visual contrast that visually gives the model a sense of proportion and scale. The DDS will not be a standard item on the model, but a cool accessory once in a while at the pond. The French DDS around its skirt (the flat sided areas) contain anti echoic panels like the rest of the boat does.
.Last edited by Albacore 569; 12-11-2025, 12:10 PM.Comment
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the final DDS done. Nautilus Dry docks magnets delivered today and inserted. The fit snug and a drop of CA glue secures them in DDS foundations designed in. I add magnet to other when inserting magnet from its control rod plastic mount into frame assuring magnetic poles are oriented correctly. I will paint black tomorrow morning and mask the antiechoic skirt a slightly off black (a Testors rubber black). I wanted to take these in primer gray, so details are clearer.
Last edited by Albacore 569; Today, 01:09 AM.Comment


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