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From: JPBWEB
Mark,
For rendering, I use Flamingo, that is a plugin for my Rhino 3.0. It is a relatively rudimentary tool as renderers go, but a notch above the built-in renderer in Rhino, and the biggest advantage is that I can just copy a model in MoI, paste it into Rhino and get it rendered presto. No file saving, no export, no conversion. Just plain workflow.
For more serious rendering, I export my model to Luxology Modo. I hasten to admit that I do not fully master that beast, by far. Even lighting and displaying a simple scene seems to be soooo awkward. I suppose that I am a bit dense, as it seems that others can get wonders out of Modo, but when I read their description of how they did it, I do not even understand much of it, let alone replicate it. How frustrating! In fact, I sort of like Modo, but I wonder why. Joke apart, I just cannot get myself in the mood of subD modelling, but if I did, I am sure that Modo is a great tool.
From: BurrMan
Hi JP,
I screwed up....I was in My mind and when i got to MoI and tried it, I couldnt do what I was thinking it would do for the tail sections....
My bad. Thanks for looking out for me there! Sorry to mislead.
From: Denis (DENISJAGUAR)
Wow nice tries to do that in one piece.
I know you will be able to do that one. A lot of work but practice is the best teacher to learn.
From: JPBWEB
Hi Mark,
I have good news and bad news about Kormoran.
The bad news is that the Russian drawing you and I used as a base is probably very wrong in the rudder area. It seems that whoever drew the plan used a single screw ship setup for what is in fact a twin-screw ship. I suspected that much early on and could not find a single photo of a multiple screw ship that would have a gap in front of the rudder. This was confirmed today from knowledgeable chaps at the modelwarship.com forum.
The good news is that the proper setup is much easier to model, much like a sailing ship in fact, with a keel extending nearly to the stern but no extension.
That puts a final nail into the coffin of that nagging doubt. Now I can resume the modelling of Kormoran. Still no luck finding proper photographs of a WW1 vintage 15cm gun though. All the ones I have show only the business end of the gun into its casemate. No view of the breech whatsoever, except from a single drawing.

But I guess that a contemporary smaller gun might be similar enough for our purposes.
Image Attachments:
WNGER_59-45_skc16[1].jpg
From: JPBWEB
It seems that Kormoran's rudder and propellers would have been very similar to Altmark's, a contemporary ship that was used by the Kriegsmarine as a support ship for the Graf Spee. Here is a view from my friend Peter Lienau.

Image Attachments:
Altmark_011[1].jpg
From: Mark Brown (MABROWN)
Hi Jean-Paul,
Sorry for my slow reply. I think I mentioned that my employer was going to give me a shot at some drafting work. Unfortunately never happened (don't think it was ever really going to). Most of my time the last couple of weeks has been devoted to finding a new job.
Thanks for all the excellent info for Kormoran. I hunted down your Model Warships forum thread. Very helpful stuff. I had a devil of a time undoing the incorrect stern I already had. I had gone too far with other work on it to start from scratch. I think it has come out OK though. Some screen shots attached.
How is your Kormoran coming along?
Image Attachments:
kormoran_100211_071_001.jpg
kormoran_100211_071_002.jpg
kormoran_100211_071_003.jpg
kormoran_100211_071_004.jpg
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