Sunday, November 22, 2009

Final Presentation






Renovatio is 64m (210ft) trimaran designed and commissioned for Sir Richard Branson.

Specifications:
LOA: 64m (210')
Beam: 11.5m (38')
Draft: Max 3.0m (10')
Speed: 25 knots / 28 Knots
Propulsion: Twin Magnetohydrodynamic drives
Year: Mfg-2011 Model-2011
Mfg: DLM Shipyard
Location: Australia
Type: Mega Yacht

Price: $AUD 94,000,000

Renovatio, the flagship of Sir Richard Bransons private vehicle fleet, is a 64m triple-hulled floating palace. With luxury fittings extending from stem to stern, Renovatio is capable of accommodating up to 36 passengers in 18 staterooms. The ships world-class compliment of 21 staff tends to every need and desire while the highly specialised 8-man engineering team maintains one of only 2 privately owned magnetohydrodynamic propulsion systems. The MHD drive allows Sir Richard to travel swiftly to and from his private Caribbean getaway, Necker Island, while the state-of-the-art communications systems allows him to command his vast empire from anywhere on the seven seas.




Finishing..... Finished!




After finishing all the spray-on painting all that was left to do was to paint in the timber decks by hand. This was done with brush-on acrylics, with several coats of different brown/tan colours to get the right finish. The final timber colours were applied very lightly with a dry brush to try and simulate the grain of the timber.

If I had the cash I would have liked to have the forward and rear decks, and also the helicopter pad, rapid prototyped to match the 2nd level deck. It came out really nice and is one of my favourite pieces of the build.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Finishing - Glass House/DLO








On the home stretch now...

Here I am masking off the base coats in prep for painting the glasshouse black. This will really help show how much of the top surfaces of the super yacht are covered in glass.


Finishing - Base Colour

Checking the fit of the rear deck after the first top coat. The Deck railing is made from black acrylic, heated and bent to fit the deck edge. All the glass on the yacht will be presented as black, so the deck railing was made in black acrylic to show that its a glass railing.





After another 3 coats of grey primer were applied (with rubbing back between each coat) before the base colour was applied. I have chosen to go with a metallic gunmetal grey for the main surfaces. I didnt want to have 'just another white yacht' so I thought this would be a bit different.

These photos show the yacht with 3-4 coats of the base gunmetal grey applied. I rubbed back each layer of paint with 1200 wet & dry paper too. The colour seemed a bit bland with the first couple of coats, but each subsequent layer added extra depth to the paint.

Finishing - Primer


Several coats of spray on primer putty have been applied over the shellac sealer. Each layer was rubbed back with fine wet & dry abrasive paper before the next was applied.

There are about 3 layers of yellow primer putty on the model at this stage, plus the first coat of grey primer.
The grey primer coat has been rubbed back with 1200 wet&dry paper.


Prep for Painting

Before Shellac

After Shellac


With the surfaces nice and smooth I have started the finishing process. In theses pictures I have sealed the clay with a couple of light coats of shellac. This will (hopefully) allow the subsequent layers of primer and paint to stick to the clay surface.

Final Surfaces




Here I have finalised the surfaces and slicked them to a smooth clean finish. Using some foam-backed abrasive pads I lightly sanded the clay surface. This helped to highlight any small imperfections still remaining.

This was also the final fit check of the rear deck and staircase set before painting. It wasnt sitting square to the yacht so I removed a little clay until it fitted in snug.