This model is a British "Hunt" Class destroyer.
It is a Sirmar limited edition (100) semI kit at 1/48 scale and some 6 feet in length. When he bought the model it was already constructed, but as a static model. So out came the jigsaw, Manual NOT powered.
The deck around the aft gun turret was cut to allow a good inspection of the inside of the hull. He tried to remove the bridge superstructure but this would have meant destroying it to remove. Out came the jigsaw again and cut an access hatch in the main deck.
The steering servo was fitted and attached ( by keyhole surgery ) and 2 x MFA 800 motors were fitted. Scale Prop Shop Props were fitted and the radio gear just jury rigged for her first trial. She was roughly ballasted with 2 x 12volt 7Ah batteries and she was ready for her first trials.
She sailed well with no water ingress to the hull, so the radio gear was installed properly with individual speed controllers to each motor. The results are as seen here.
{"text":"This model is a British \"Hunt\" Class destroyer.\r\n\r\nIt is a Sirmar limited edition (100) semI kit at 1/48 scale and some 6 feet in length. When he bought the model it was already constructed, but as a static model. So out came the jigsaw, Manual NOT powered.\r\n\r\nThe deck around the aft gun turret was cut to allow a good inspection of the inside of the hull. He tried to remove the bridge superstructure but this would have meant destroying it to remove. Out came the jigsaw again and cut an access hatch in the main deck.\r\n\r\nThe steering servo was fitted and attached ( by keyhole surgery ) and 2 x MFA 800 motors were fitted. Scale Prop Shop Props were fitted and the radio gear just jury rigged for her first trial. She was roughly ballasted with 2 x 12volt 7Ah batteries and she was ready for her first trials.\r\n\r\nShe sailed well with no water ingress to the hull, so the radio gear was installed properly with individual speed controllers to each motor. The results are as seen here.","subject":"Grey Funnel Steamers built by Bob Blease","media":[{"id":"1210193852","name":"1210193852.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210193852/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210193852/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210193853","name":"1210193853.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210193853/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210193853/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210193854","name":"1210193854.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210193854/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210193854/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
It is a Sirmar limited edition (100) semI kit at 1/48 scale and some 6 feet in length. When he bought the model it was already constructed, but as a static model. So out came the jigsaw, Manual NOT powered.
The deck around the aft gun turret was cut to allow a good inspection of the inside of the hull. He tried to remove the bridge superstructure but this would have meant destroying it to remove. Out came the jigsaw again and cut an access hatch in the main deck.
The steering servo was fitted and attached ( by keyhole surgery ) and 2 x MFA 800 motors were fitted. Scale Prop Shop Props were fitted and the radio gear just jury rigged for her first trial. She was roughly ballasted with 2 x 12volt 7Ah batteries and she was ready for her first trials.
She sailed well with no water ingress to the hull, so the radio gear was installed properly with individual speed controllers to each motor. The results are as seen here.
This is the Hugh William Viscount Gough. She is a solent class lifeboat. She went into service in 1963 as the Stornoway lifeboat. She was there for around twenty years.
She then went on to Barra and ended her service at Dunbar. She was sold in 1993 and is now out in Malaysia.
I have scratch built her from the hull up. She has a fibre glass hull and the super structure is made from plasticard. She took four weeks to build. I have some bits and bobs to do to her.
She runs on two MFA 850 torprdos, but I am going to down size to 800's.
We sail her at Mote park Maidstone most Sundays and also at shows.
She is 48" long with a scale of 1:12
{"text":"This is the Hugh William Viscount Gough. She is a solent class lifeboat. She went into service in 1963 as the Stornoway lifeboat. She was there for around twenty years.\r\n\r\nShe then went on to Barra and ended her service at Dunbar. She was sold in 1993 and is now out in Malaysia.\r\n\r\nI have scratch built her from the hull up. She has a fibre glass hull and the super structure is made from plasticard. She took four weeks to build. I have some bits and bobs to do to her.\r\n\r\nShe runs on two MFA 850 torprdos, but I am going to down size to 800's.\r\n\r\nWe sail her at Mote park Maidstone most Sundays and also at shows.\r\n\r\nShe is 48\" long with a scale of 1:12","subject":"The Hugh William Viscount Gough built by Debbie and Alan","media":[{"id":"1210192994","name":"1210192994.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192994/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192994/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210192995","name":"1210192995.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192995/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192995/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210192996","name":"1210192996.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192996/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192996/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210192997","name":"1210192997.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192997/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192997/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
The Hugh William Viscount Gough built by Debbie and Alan
This is the Hugh William Viscount Gough. She is a solent class lifeboat. She went into service in 1963 as the Stornoway lifeboat. She was there for around twenty years.
She then went on to Barra and ended her service at Dunbar. She was sold in 1993 and is now out in Malaysia.
I have scratch built her from the hull up. She has a fibre glass hull and the super structure is made from plasticard. She took four weeks to build. I have some bits and bobs to do to her.
She runs on two MFA 850 torprdos, but I am going to down size to 800's.
We sail her at Mote park Maidstone most Sundays and also at shows.
I agree with Larryshaw48. Many of the members of this site have a general interest in vintage boats including the fireboats, I'm one of them! Other categories are available to cater for that and it keeps the site busy and of broad interest. it also helps build a data and information archive for others to access - a vintage boat treasure chest! The more the merrier I say 😊
I agree with Larryshaw48. Many of the members of this site have a general interest in vintage boats including the fireboats, I'm one of them! Other categories are available to cater for that and it keeps the site busy and of broad interest. it also helps build a data and information archive for others to access - a vintage boat treasure chest! The more the merrier I say 😊
HI Alan and Debbie
Nice to see your Aerokits Solent still going strong 😊 . My original kit sails infrequently but I really enjoy sailing her. I intend to update the control from a Bobs board to twin Mtronic ESc's but will keep the two Bhuler motors and 12v 18Ahr SlA. I also need to update the number I originally allocated as mine still has the original Watertight door. Thanks to the internet, this and other on line modelling sites I can now make the model represent an original lifeboat. I enjoy looking at all 😊 model boat pictures and my Aerokits Crash Tender was restored with help from this site. I have a model tug that has fire monitors fitted and I intend to make them operational. Previous attempts showed up my poor soldering in the connection piping 😟 . I agree with thelegos.
Dave
HI Alan and Debbie
Nice to see your Aerokits Solent still going strong 😊 . My original kit sails infrequently but I really enjoy sailing her. I intend to update the control from a Bobs board to twin Mtronic ESc's but will keep the two Bhuler motors and 12v 18Ahr SlA. I also need to update the number I originally allocated as mine still has the original Watertight door. Thanks to the internet, this and other on line modelling sites I can now make the model represent an original lifeboat. I enjoy looking at all 😊 model boat pictures and my Aerokits Crash Tender was restored with help from this site. I have a model tug that has fire monitors fitted and I intend to make them operational. Previous attempts showed up my poor soldering in the connection piping 😟 . I agree with thelegos.
Dave
This lifeboat was a part-kit from Metcalfe Mouldings, being just a bare hull and superstructure. All the detailed work was scratch- built by my son and I did all the drive and electrics.
It is powered by two 540 motors through a single water-cooled speed controller and the props are about 35mm. My son and I sail it at our club water at Knightcote in Warwickshire. it is now about 4 years old and, (touch wood), pretty reliable.
{"text":"This lifeboat was a part-kit from Metcalfe Mouldings, being just a bare hull and superstructure. All the detailed work was scratch- built by my son and I did all the drive and electrics.\r\n\r\nIt is powered by two 540 motors through a single water-cooled speed controller and the props are about 35mm. My son and I sail it at our club water at Knightcote in Warwickshire. it is now about 4 years old and, (touch wood), pretty reliable.","subject":"Life boat built by Pete Munday","media":[{"id":"1210192895","name":"1210192895.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192895/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192895/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
This lifeboat was a part-kit from Metcalfe Mouldings, being just a bare hull and superstructure. All the detailed work was scratch- built by my son and I did all the drive and electrics.
It is powered by two 540 motors through a single water-cooled speed controller and the props are about 35mm. My son and I sail it at our club water at Knightcote in Warwickshire. it is now about 4 years old and, (touch wood), pretty reliable.
The hull of this model was my own design in 2004 and was sailed for 2 years, and then a new upper decks and battery system were added during the winter of 2005. The hull performed well enough but my original cabin design was too crude to keep.
The boat shown here depicts my effort to copy a 1958 ChrisCraft Cabin Cruiser at a scale of 1" = 1'.
The hull is 1/8" thick pine planks on frames with hand cut Walnut decking and 3/16" Walnut cabin sides. No epoxy or glass was used on the hull - just a good paint job.
The big change was to replace a bulky & heavy 12VDC leac acid battery with 9 AA dry cells connected in series. Bathtub testing indicated I could expect about 2 hours running time at full speed and that estimate was about right. A Dumas 12VDC motor and mechanical speed control were used with a JR XR 2 control.
The reduction in battery weight made a very large speed and appearance difference. Availability of the AA cells was an economic plus.
{"text":"The hull of this model was my own design in 2004 and was sailed for 2 years, and then a new upper decks and battery system were added during the winter of 2005. The hull performed well enough but my original cabin design was too crude to keep.\r\n\r\nThe boat shown here depicts my effort to copy a 1958 ChrisCraft Cabin Cruiser at a scale of 1\" = 1'.\r\n\r\nThe hull is 1/8\" thick pine planks on frames with hand cut Walnut decking and 3/16\" Walnut cabin sides. No epoxy or glass was used on the hull - just a good paint job.\r\n\r\nThe big change was to replace a bulky & heavy 12VDC leac acid battery with 9 AA dry cells connected in series. Bathtub testing indicated I could expect about 2 hours running time at full speed and that estimate was about right. A Dumas 12VDC motor and mechanical speed control were used with a JR XR 2 control.\r\n\r\nThe reduction in battery weight made a very large speed and appearance difference. Availability of the AA cells was an economic plus.","subject":"'Mary D' by John Simons","media":[{"id":"1210192084","name":"1210192084.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192084/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192084/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210192085","name":"1210192085.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192085/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192085/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210192086","name":"1210192086.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192086/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192086/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210192087","name":"1210192087.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192087/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210192087/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
The hull of this model was my own design in 2004 and was sailed for 2 years, and then a new upper decks and battery system were added during the winter of 2005. The hull performed well enough but my original cabin design was too crude to keep.
The boat shown here depicts my effort to copy a 1958 ChrisCraft Cabin Cruiser at a scale of 1" = 1'.
The hull is 1/8" thick pine planks on frames with hand cut Walnut decking and 3/16" Walnut cabin sides. No epoxy or glass was used on the hull - just a good paint job.
The big change was to replace a bulky & heavy 12VDC leac acid battery with 9 AA dry cells connected in series. Bathtub testing indicated I could expect about 2 hours running time at full speed and that estimate was about right. A Dumas 12VDC motor and mechanical speed control were used with a JR XR 2 control.
The reduction in battery weight made a very large speed and appearance difference. Availability of the AA cells was an economic plus.
"BOO BOO Kitty" is a scale model of a Crosby designed Cape Cod Cat Boat.[USA] it was built from scratch at a scale of 9.04" = 1"; the model being 26.5" oal.
The dimensions were taken from a book that highly detailed the building of a real Cat Boat.
The hull is plank-on-frame with epoxy and glass cloth as the final surface. A separate and detachable fin keel was used for sailing of the centerboard model.
Radio controls were a Hitec sail winch [HS-785HB] and one servo for the rudder with a 2 channel JR transmitter.
Copying the book plans, scaling them down, and construction took up the winter of 2006/2007. The model is sailing better than anticipated on a local lake in Langhorne, Pennsylvania.
{"text":"\"BOO BOO Kitty\" is a scale model of a Crosby designed Cape Cod Cat Boat.[USA] it was built from scratch at a scale of 9.04\" = 1\"; the model being 26.5\" oal.\r\n\r\nThe dimensions were taken from a book that highly detailed the building of a real Cat Boat.\r\n\r\nThe hull is plank-on-frame with epoxy and glass cloth as the final surface. A separate and detachable fin keel was used for sailing of the centerboard model.\r\n\r\nRadio controls were a Hitec sail winch [HS-785HB] and one servo for the rudder with a 2 channel JR transmitter.\r\n\r\nCopying the book plans, scaling them down, and construction took up the winter of 2006/2007. The model is sailing better than anticipated on a local lake in Langhorne, Pennsylvania.","subject":"Cape Cod Cat Boat built by John Simons","media":[{"id":"1210191925","name":"1210191925.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210191925/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210191925/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210191926","name":"1210191926.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210191926/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210191926/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
"BOO BOO Kitty" is a scale model of a Crosby designed Cape Cod Cat Boat.[USA] it was built from scratch at a scale of 9.04" = 1"; the model being 26.5" oal.
The dimensions were taken from a book that highly detailed the building of a real Cat Boat.
The hull is plank-on-frame with epoxy and glass cloth as the final surface. A separate and detachable fin keel was used for sailing of the centerboard model.
Radio controls were a Hitec sail winch [HS-785HB] and one servo for the rudder with a 2 channel JR transmitter.
Copying the book plans, scaling them down, and construction took up the winter of 2006/2007. The model is sailing better than anticipated on a local lake in Langhorne, Pennsylvania.
John called this model "Nancy Dancer". it started of with plans from 'Nexus Plans Service' for Vic Smeed's 'Vivacity'. John used the hull only plans and created everything else himself. it ended up LOA 49" with a beam of 17". With the 12VDC battery the weight came to 23 1/2#.
Because of his basic 'Sedan Cruiser' he designed all the mechanicals and electricals beneath the main cabin floor, including the battery. There was quite a bit of detail put into the main cabin - unfortunately not shown in the photos - including a galley, eating area, furniture and the helmsman's station. The scale is 1" = 1ft.
This hull is plank on frame using 1/8" pine planks. Below the waterline there's epoxy & glass and above there is just epoxy. All the brightwork, cabin housing & decks is natural Cherry with a clear urethane finish.
The power is a Dumas 12VDC motor with a mechanical speed control. The bottom photo shows that he added a 2:1 gearbox to the motor and ran it in reverse to increase the prop RPMs. He also included a constant running fan to cool the motor due to the confinement of the space.
The single propellor is 2" - 2 pitch - 3 bladed bronze. As on all his models he used a 2 channel JR XR2 75 mhz.
{"text":"John called this model \"Nancy Dancer\". it started of with plans from 'Nexus Plans Service' for Vic Smeed's 'Vivacity'. John used the hull only plans and created everything else himself. it ended up LOA 49\" with a beam of 17\". With the 12VDC battery the weight came to 23 1/2#.\r\n\r\nBecause of his basic 'Sedan Cruiser' he designed all the mechanicals and electricals beneath the main cabin floor, including the battery. There was quite a bit of detail put into the main cabin - unfortunately not shown in the photos - including a galley, eating area, furniture and the helmsman's station. The scale is 1\" = 1ft.\r\n\r\nThis hull is plank on frame using 1/8\" pine planks. Below the waterline there's epoxy & glass and above there is just epoxy. All the brightwork, cabin housing & decks is natural Cherry with a clear urethane finish.\r\n\r\nThe power is a Dumas 12VDC motor with a mechanical speed control. The bottom photo shows that he added a 2:1 gearbox to the motor and ran it in reverse to increase the prop RPMs. He also included a constant running fan to cool the motor due to the confinement of the space.\r\n\r\nThe single propellor is 2\" - 2 pitch - 3 bladed bronze. As on all his models he used a 2 channel JR XR2 75 mhz.","subject":"The \"Nancy Dancer\" built by John Simons","media":[{"id":"1210191413","name":"1210191413.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210191413/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210191413/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210191414","name":"1210191414.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210191414/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210191414/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210191415","name":"1210191415.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210191415/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210191415/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210191416","name":"1210191416.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210191416/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210191416/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
John called this model "Nancy Dancer". it started of with plans from 'Nexus Plans Service' for Vic Smeed's 'Vivacity'. John used the hull only plans and created everything else himself. it ended up LOA 49" with a beam of 17". With the 12VDC battery the weight came to 23 1/2#.
Because of his basic 'Sedan Cruiser' he designed all the mechanicals and electricals beneath the main cabin floor, including the battery. There was quite a bit of detail put into the main cabin - unfortunately not shown in the photos - including a galley, eating area, furniture and the helmsman's station. The scale is 1" = 1ft.
This hull is plank on frame using 1/8" pine planks. Below the waterline there's epoxy & glass and above there is just epoxy. All the brightwork, cabin housing & decks is natural Cherry with a clear urethane finish.
The power is a Dumas 12VDC motor with a mechanical speed control. The bottom photo shows that he added a 2:1 gearbox to the motor and ran it in reverse to increase the prop RPMs. He also included a constant running fan to cool the motor due to the confinement of the space.
The single propellor is 2" - 2 pitch - 3 bladed bronze. As on all his models he used a 2 channel JR XR2 75 mhz.
These pictures are of a scale model of Captain Joshua Slocum's "Spray". it was sailed around the world, singlehanded between 1895-1898. Slocum re-built a Delaware oysterman hull in Fairhaven, MA and had been a gift to him.
After reading of his exploits in an original copy of his book, 'Sailing Alone Around The World' 1899 The Century Co., John copied the drawings that were in the book, established a scale for each and then converted those scales to just one - 1"=14.6" and proceeded to make a model of the famous boat. At that time [2003-2004] there was a commercial kit available but after much research John concluded that he had enough information from the book to build his own version. Actually the available kit contained some mis-information about the boat and that settled the matter.
The model was built plank-on-frame and then covered with epoxy/glass since it was intended for RC. He sailed her during the summer of 2004 and was quite pleased with her performance. An opportunity to sell the model came to him and he did so in January 2005.
{"text":"These pictures are of a scale model of Captain Joshua Slocum's \"Spray\". it was sailed around the world, singlehanded between 1895-1898. Slocum re-built a Delaware oysterman hull in Fairhaven, MA and had been a gift to him.\r\n\r\nAfter reading of his exploits in an original copy of his book, 'Sailing Alone Around The World' 1899 The Century Co., John copied the drawings that were in the book, established a scale for each and then converted those scales to just one - 1\"=14.6\" and proceeded to make a model of the famous boat. At that time [2003-2004] there was a commercial kit available but after much research John concluded that he had enough information from the book to build his own version. Actually the available kit contained some mis-information about the boat and that settled the matter.\r\n\r\nThe model was built plank-on-frame and then covered with epoxy/glass since it was intended for RC. He sailed her during the summer of 2004 and was quite pleased with her performance. An opportunity to sell the model came to him and he did so in January 2005.","subject":"\"Spray\" built by John Simons","media":[{"id":"1210191230","name":"1210191230.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210191230/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210191230/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210191231","name":"1210191231.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210191231/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210191231/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
These pictures are of a scale model of Captain Joshua Slocum's "Spray". it was sailed around the world, singlehanded between 1895-1898. Slocum re-built a Delaware oysterman hull in Fairhaven, MA and had been a gift to him.
After reading of his exploits in an original copy of his book, 'Sailing Alone Around The World' 1899 The Century Co., John copied the drawings that were in the book, established a scale for each and then converted those scales to just one - 1"=14.6" and proceeded to make a model of the famous boat. At that time [2003-2004] there was a commercial kit available but after much research John concluded that he had enough information from the book to build his own version. Actually the available kit contained some mis-information about the boat and that settled the matter.
The model was built plank-on-frame and then covered with epoxy/glass since it was intended for RC. He sailed her during the summer of 2004 and was quite pleased with her performance. An opportunity to sell the model came to him and he did so in January 2005.
The boat has no name as yet, it is scrach bult from two photos. I found in a loft as usual. it is about 25/30 years old, she is powered by a darke horse 785 turbo with a 2.5 to 1 gearbox and two 9.6 volt 3700maH NiMH bateries and a 50mm 3 bladed prop, sailed at our local lake.
The boat is far from finished and is not to scale as you can see, but for a first time build it looks pritty fair out on the water. Just one last word, many thanks to all the members of the forum for all your help.bit of a muck here lads the photos were in the loft,the hull I bought for £30.and every thing else is scratch built.
{"text":"The boat has no name as yet, it is scrach bult from two photos. I found in a loft as usual. it is about 25/30 years old, she is powered by a darke horse 785 turbo with a 2.5 to 1 gearbox and two 9.6 volt 3700maH NiMH bateries and a 50mm 3 bladed prop, sailed at our local lake.\r\n\r\nThe boat is far from finished and is not to scale as you can see, but for a first time build it looks pritty fair out on the water. Just one last word, many thanks to all the members of the forum for all your help.bit of a muck here lads the photos were in the loft,the hull I bought for \u00a330.and every thing else is scratch built.","subject":"Fireboat scratch built by Steve","media":[{"id":"1210190326","name":"1210190326.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210190326/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210190326/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210190327","name":"1210190327.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210190327/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210190327/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210190328","name":"1210190328.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210190328/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210190328/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210190329","name":"1210190329.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://hobby.land/media/1210190329/l","thumbUrl":"https://hobby.land/media/1210190329/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
The boat has no name as yet, it is scrach bult from two photos. I found in a loft as usual. it is about 25/30 years old, she is powered by a darke horse 785 turbo with a 2.5 to 1 gearbox and two 9.6 volt 3700maH NiMH bateries and a 50mm 3 bladed prop, sailed at our local lake.
The boat is far from finished and is not to scale as you can see, but for a first time build it looks pritty fair out on the water. Just one last word, many thanks to all the members of the forum for all your help.bit of a muck here lads the photos were in the loft,the hull I bought for £30.and every thing else is scratch built.