My Review and Build of Blue Ridge Model's 1/350 Scale,
USS Nautilus, SSN-571 Nuclear Attack Submarine
LAST UPDATE: July 31, 2012. Safety/Life Line Stanchions on Deck.
Introduction and what's in the box - July 16, 2012
This is a resin model of the first nuclear powered vessel in the world, the USS Nautilus, SSN-571, attack submarine. It is made by [/b], and sold at [/b] in Blue Ridge, Georgia and online. They sent the kit to me specifically for me to review and build it on my [/b].
History:
The building of the USS Nautilus, the first nuclear powered vessel for the US Navy, was authorized by the US Congress in the summer of 1951, and was specifically planned and managed by the famous, Admiral Hyman Rickover, who became known as the father of the US Nuclear Navy, and specifically as the father of nuclear submarining. He had a great passion and drive for nuclear powered vessels, and a brilliant design, tactical, and strategic mind. The keel was laid at General Dynamic's Electric Boat Division in Groton, CT in June of 1952. She was fitted with a Westinghouse 52W pressurized water reactor built specifically to US Navy design specifications, heavily influenced by Admiral Rickover. The lead engineer/designer was John Burnham and she was christened and launched in January 1954, and commissioned into the US Navy in September of 1954 under Commander Eugene Wilkinson, her first skipper, and the first commanding officer of a nuclear powered vessel in the world. She remained at dock for final outfitting and static tests, and then at 11 a.m. on January 17th, 1955 she put to sea for the first time and Commander Wilkinson signaled the historic message: "Underway on nuclear power."
The Nautilus revolutionized virtually all policies and procedures for submarine warfare. She could dive and stay under for longer than any other submarine...restricted only by the needs of her crew with respect to food and relief. She was faster than any other submarine of her day, and she required no fuel. On her maiden voyage she covered over 1,200 nautical milses in less than 90 hours, a feat never imagined by other submarine technology of that day. In August 1958 she became the first vessel in the world to reach the geographic North Pole. During this mission, in addition to reaching the North Pole, she sailed from the Barrow Sea Valley and ultimately surfaced northeast of Greenland, having traveled 1,590 nautical miles in 96 hours and becoming the first vessel to sail submerged completely around the North Pole. The operation was called Operation Sunshine. She and her crew received a Presidential Unit Citation for this accomplishement, the first Presidential Unit Citation ever awarded to a naval vessel in peace time to that date.
Nautilus served ably as a US Navy attack submarine undergoing regular overhauls and refueling of her nuclear rods every 4-6 years. Due to her early design, she was not nearly as quiet as other attack submarines that followed her (who learned from her experince and led to the much more quiet tear-drop hull designs, and later reactor damprning and hull coatings based on the knowledge gained by her operation). The noise, which is a significant vulnerability in udersea warfare, caused her to reduce speed significantly in any opeational capacity during the cold war.
Nautilus was ultimately decommissioned in November of 1980 after 26 years of service. She was designated a National Historic Landmark by the United States Secretary of the Interior on 20 May 1982. She was named as the official state vessel of Connecticut in 1983 and thereafter went through an extensive conversion at Mare Island Naval Shipyard, finally returning to Groton, Connecticut on 6 July 1985. On April 11, 1986, Nautilus was opened to the public as part of the U.S. Navy Submarine Force Library and Museum in Groton, CT to serve as a museum of submarine history. She underwent a five-month preservation/refit in 2002, at the Electric Boat division of General Dynamics, at a cost of approximately $4.7 million and was moved to a berth near the Naval Submarine Base in New London, CT, where she resides to this day (summer 2012). She attracts close to, or over 250,000 visitors annually there.
Nautilus celebrated the 50th anniversary of her commissioning on 30 September 2004. The ceremony included a speech from then Vice Admiral Eugene Wilkinson, who served as her first Commanding Officer. At that time she was also named as an American Nuclear Society National Nuclear Landmark.
The Model:
The model comes in a white box with the Blue Ridge Model logo on it and a depiction of the USS Nautilus on the cover. The model is packed extremely well inside the box, with formed foam compartments for the hull, and each of the sprues...including the conning tower...in seperate compartments and within sealed plastic bags. So, in addition to the hull and conning tower, there are 2 sprues of resin parts. One containing the forward dive planes and the periscopes, sensors, and various masts (15 parts), and one containing the aft dive planes, the shaft skegs, prop hubs, and various deck fittings (10 parts). So, altogether there are 27 resin parts, which are all finely detailed and very well molded, in this kit. There is also a sprue of photo etch (PE) parts containing the three different propeller sets from various times during Nautilus's service, radar antennas, handrails, and deck stanchions for the safety lines while surfaced (a total of 67 parts). All in all, there are 104 parts for the kit.
Blue Ridge has also included .020" brass pieces to be cut to length for the different masts and particularly for the two actuators extending the forward dive planes into their deployed position. They also include some very fine, clear line to be used for the safety lines when the vessel is surfaced which you thread through the eyelets on the PE stanchions.
If that were not enough, Blue Ridge has also provided a small CD to load on your computer which includes PDF files for the instructions, a file giving a detaied history of the Nautilus, renderings/drawings of the vessel, and a seperate folder with real-life pictures of the submarine (50 photos altogether). These photos provide a really nice reference for the builder of the model as they show various photos of her throughout her career and can help in determining which part of her career you want to depict with the model.
Blue Ridge has a detailed 7-page, color instruction manual that comes with the kit. It shows and explains every step of building the model, from pre-assembly and removal of the casting plug, through each step of assembly, to painting and completing the model. I like that these instructions have depictions showing all of the parts, indicating where they are located both on the sprues and on the model. In the instructions, and with the parts included, you have the option of which stage of Nautilus's career to depict with three different propeller types and a different coloring scheme. You have the option of showing the forward dive planes either deployed or folded up in the stowed position. You also have the option(s) of which of her many sensors and masts to deploy on the conning tower.
The Build - Glues, tools, removing the casting plug and initial assembly - July 17, 2012
I will be building the USS Nautilus in its final operational configuration as a US Navy attack submarine in the 1980 time frame, after all of the upgrades and shortly before de-commissioning. I will outfit her for surface running with the safety line up on the deck, personnel on the conning tower and the deck, and all masts and sensors deployed, along with the surface running handrails on the conning tower. I am also deploying the dive planes. The model will be built and painted to that configuration and those options.
I use ZAP CA glues for my resin models, both the fast setting version (when simple glueing is required with a good fit and enough structural support to not require as much strength, particulally for shearing (lateral forces) strength, and the slower setting (filling) version for when the fit is not as good and when more strength is needed. The slow setting is in the yellow bottle. I also have on hand some Quick-Cure two part epoxy (glue and hardener) from Hobby Town for times when even more filling and strength are required which the two solutions provide when mixed together...but which also require quite a bit longer to set.
In additrion to my plastic and PE sprue cutters (and I have different cutters for each, the PE cutter being sharper and stronger...and more expensive), I also use seveal knifes and saws for cutting away the casting plug (in this case the plug is pretty stout for the Nautilus hull so I used a very sharp Buck knife with a serated edge on one side...but I also have smaller knives and saws for more delicate parts, as well as my cutters). I use a full set of small files and then various grades of sand paper to get a good finish once the intial casting plug (or other rough) cuts are made.
So, first I used the Buck knife's serated blade to saw through and cut off the large three plug attachements along the hull, and a smaller, thin file to cut away the more delicate plug attachement back by the rudder.
I then used my small flat file to file down the rough cut area near the attachement to be as close to the hull contour as possible, and then used sand paper to get a good, smooth, contour fitting finish in those same areas.
Next, all the major pieces were assembled on the hull. This included the conning tower (which had a small seam in the fit, even after working with the square insert), the forward dive planes in their deployed position with the actuators (and I used small .025 sprue material for this...easier to work with and I can easily mold the cut ends to be flush with the hull and dive planes), the anchor, the streamlined and faired shaft skegs, and the aft dive planes.
My next steps will include painting the vessel in its final operational colors, which will be a flat black for the hull and Conning Tower, and using weathered black for the walking surfaces on the deck to depict the anti-skid surface where the crew walks. It will ultimately (as a later, final step) include the placement of the decals and pennant number on the conning tower and the forward hull. After the paint has dried I will place the most modern propellers and shaft hubs, painted accordingly, and then add the persicopes, masts and sensors, and finally the stanchions and line for the guard rail.
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