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Panzon
Mike Szwarc (Panzon)
US

Geobukeon (Korean Turtle Ship)

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The Young Modeler kit I used for this build. 
 

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The 1:3 scale speculative turtle ship reproduction in the Korean War Memorial in Seoul that I wanted to model. 
 

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Hull was built OOB. 
 

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Deck built OOB. 
 

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Tail structure was modified and detailed to match the museum replica. 
 

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Cannons and oars installed. 
 

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The kit mast supports, access hatches, and armor plating (l) are significantly different from those on the museum replica, this is the point where I left the kit instructions behind, and began scratch-building. 
 

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Mast supports modified to match museum replica. 
 

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I realized that the ends of the museum replica's planking are not visible, so I had to go back and cut a rabbet in the end beams. 
 

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Rabbet cut to receive ends of roof planking. 
 

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The kit ring bolts (r) were too large, so I made my own. 
 

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The iron corners were included in the kit in the form of dyed veneer. I made the rest of the ironwork myself from textured black paper rubbed with graphite. 
 

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To cut the hundreds of iron armor plates needed for the model, I made a punch by forcing the end of an allen wrench into a piece of brass tubing. 
 

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Hundreds of spikes were also needed. 
 

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I made a setting tool out of styrene scrap to ensure that all the spikes were set to the same height. 
 

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The dragon heads on Korean replicas have a more open mouth, and longer horns than the resin head included with the kit (r), so I had to resculpt it. 
 

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I cut the head apart, and used a piece of brass rod to hold the halves apart. 
 

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I used epoxy putty to resculpt the features. 
 

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I included a vent in the back of the dragon's mouth because contemporaneous reports indicate that the crew could cause a foul-smelling smoke to be expelled from the dragon's mouth. 
 

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I made my own sails with strips of dyed paper glued together. 
 

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I simulated the bamboo sail spreaders (top) using modified dowels. 
 

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The anchor included with the kit (r) is significantly different from anchors on Korean replicas, so I scratch-built my own anchor. 
 

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Kit anchor (l), and scratch-built anchor (r). 
 

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Commentaires

17 3 August 2020, 14:34
Tom Beighley
I'd hate to have one chasing me down, looks very menacing. Nice car collection as well!
3 September 2020, 16:08
Treehugger
This somehow reminds me of a movie. Hm.. The Admiral: Roaring Currents
3 September 2020, 16:35
Mike Szwarc
Thanks for looking, guys! Treehugger, The Admiral: Roaring Currents is about the conflict where this ship would have been used, If such a ship actually existed. There are no contemporary drawings of the geobukseon, only a couple of vague written descriptions of it. This model is of a scaled down speculative recreation of a turtle ship on display at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul.
3 September 2020, 17:14
matsal _
All the shipwright traditions from the old days were passed down orally. The word-of-mouth drawings and the last turtle ships were destroyed during the period of Japanese colonial era. Only a few contemporary fishing han-seon, which was a traditional Korean ship, survived after independent. Some ships were rebuilt by old ship carpenters, and they were academically restored. Unfortunately, all the military han-seon, including the turtle ship and pan-ok seon, weren't. We have only superficial details, such as painting by artists or list of supplies for the military ships, and they are not enough to restore the ships academically.
9 March 2023, 00:24
Ben M
This is fantastic and interesting from a historical perspective
9 March 2023, 00:28
Villiers de Vos
Very nice work.
9 March 2023, 15:19
Spanjaard
fantastic
12 March, 22:35
gorby
Fascinating. I've not heard of the turtle ships before.
Excellent model.
20 July, 12:29

Album info

Heavy kit-bashing of the YoungModeler 1:100 scale Turtle Ship kit.

70 images
1:100
Terminé
1:100 Turtle Ship (YoungModeler KS-03)

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