PlaymoFriends

General => Report & Review => Topic started by: Customizer on February 24, 2008, 09:28:19

Title: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Customizer on February 24, 2008, 09:28:19
Hello Playmofriends,

yesterday i catch the new sailingship !

The price are 14,99 EUR this are fair !!

This ship is very cool !!

If you had any question ask ,please !

- Size are: 31 cm lengh,13 cm wide
- the anchor is not more metal
- you can haul the pirate flag

ENJOY the pics......

world greets

Andi

Ps: outdoor pictures soon later.............
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Customizer on February 24, 2008, 09:32:27
more........
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Customizer on February 24, 2008, 09:33:47
rest............

You can Full Load with 3 Cannons !!

The Top Mast are flexible !! Look last picture !

ENJOY !!
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Sir Gareth on February 24, 2008, 10:34:25
Hi Andi,

Thanks for these pictures, this really is a great looking boat lots of nice features with it. It's nice to see the use of rope on this vessel it always gives a more realistic look.
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: CountBogro on February 24, 2008, 14:37:06
Thanks for the pictures, Andi.

It is indeed a wonderfull sailingship. One I definitly want for myself. !!!

Bogro
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Martin Milner on February 24, 2008, 18:52:29
I think this is a cracking little ship, ideal to fill the gap between the big ships schooner and the rowing boats, and I've already got one being ordered for me.

This size of boat would be used for dozens of jobs in and out of harbour, such as supplying the fleet, allowing the big ships of the Royal Navy to stay where they were needed - blockading enemy ports.

Also ideal, as this ship is set up, as a vessel for pirates to nip out from the coast to snag a prize

While I like the big pirate ships, their size makes them difficult to move about. For a Playmobil boat to travel with, this is the business.
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Rasputin on February 25, 2008, 01:03:32
Very nice looking boat . Thanks for the info and pictures.
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Jimbo on February 26, 2008, 21:53:13
Thanks for the pictures.  That's a great looking boat.
Must have! :yup:
Jimbo
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Richard on February 29, 2008, 03:42:54


Thanks for another great review, Andi ...

With its lateen sail, this could very easily be a Middle Eastern dhow!

Little dhows have sailed the Nile (and the Mediterranean) for centuries. They could be crewed by pirates attacking Roman merchant vessels or used by Arab warriors boarding British Nile boats at the time of "Gordon of Khartoum" ... Great boat !!!

As Jimbo and Bogro have said ... This is a "must have boat" ... :)

Thanks again, Andi!

And, all the best,
Richard
see attachments
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: CountBogro on February 29, 2008, 06:01:50
mmm - I was thinking of a medieval fisherman ...
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: cachalote on March 03, 2008, 01:54:46
 :wow:
thank you so much for this review andi.
i have a special liking for this set and foolishly tend to think playmobil produced it using my suggestion made over a dinghy that hadoque made to go with his licorne -
http://www.playmofriends.com/forum/index.php?topic=1262.msg14900#msg14900.
moving house has kept me very busy for a very long time but i will restart to buy playmos now.
the 4444 will be the first newcomer to my new house.
one thing i didn't know, although i always thought it to be a needed feature, was the storage room beleow the planking.
this info really filled my heart with joy.

 :love:
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: cachalote on March 04, 2008, 02:32:42
 :wow:
colonel klicky, from klickywelt.de, meanwhile, produced this portuguese-man-of-war version of the 4444 kanonensegler.
the helmets are a little to much spanish-esque and caravelas (the portuguese name for these boats) were actually a a little bigger (big enough to go as far as japan) but the idea is great and it makes me happy to see the first portuguese-inspired klicky (needless to say that i am portuguese).
:love:
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: CountBogro on March 04, 2008, 17:37:32
aaah - but doesn't it look wonderfull ???  :love: :wow: :love:

Bogro
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Jimbo on March 04, 2008, 18:38:11
Absolutely fantastic! :wow:
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Richard on March 04, 2008, 19:37:26
Absolutely fantastic! :wow:

DITTO !!!
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: core on March 05, 2008, 07:37:07
My guess would be US$29.95 at your local Target, when it arrives ...
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: cachalote on March 12, 2008, 02:04:11
 :)i got my kanonensegler today.
it is bigger than i thought (and that is good).
i missed the metal anchor (it looks the same but it is made of plastic).
i missed real cannon balls (it comes with tooth-pick-like projectiles).
i missed the older quantity of accessories (dogs, buckets, hooks, food, fishes, a guitar...) but this can be a pretext to buy some extras on ebay...
i loved the tiller (luxury would be to have a moveable rudder).
it has a special number (4444) and i think it will become one of my favourites.

 :)
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Martin Milner on March 12, 2008, 08:10:07
The cannon suprised me, because I thought this was a European release, and I can still buy the normal cannons on DS - howeveer i don't actually fire the cannons often, so it doesn't bother me much.

Once I had mine assembled, the sail and mast looked too small for the hull. However to make it a playable size this is OK - any bigger and it'd be difficult to get at the deck.


It's a great ship all told, and I hope to get a couple more for my fleet.
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: cachalote on March 13, 2008, 01:09:29
 :hmm:you are right martin, the sail looks to small.
maybe there will be other versions in the future with a different concept.
there are a lot of samll detail in the hull that seem to indicate this - a couple of u-shaped frames on each side, the unfinished bow...
 ;) let us wait and see what playmobil can come up with.
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Customizer on March 13, 2008, 16:57:48
The cannon suprised me, because I thought this was a European release, and I can still buy the normal cannons on DS - howeveer i don't actually fire the cannons often, so it doesn't bother me much.

Hi Playmofriends,

if i saw the new cannons last year i thought oh my god how crazy looks this.
Looks like Lego ?!

But this time i had two 4444 and some more new cannons, i must say its realy funny to play with this cannons a battle with my son.

Looks not realy realistic but you find the bolts after shooting fast.

That was the result from the new german weapons law !

But there many custom possibilities to make a realistic cannon !  0)

world greets

Andi


Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: playmofire on March 13, 2008, 21:46:53
Thanks for the review, andi, and the photo of the custom, cachalotte.

Though I'm not into ships (well, not now that I've got rid of all but one of mine) I still appreciate what I see.  I like the ability to carry three cannon, and the bowchaser especially.

Hopefully, more versions, by PM or customs, will quickly appear.
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: CountBogro on March 14, 2008, 10:14:43
I am terribly sorry - I love the ship; but HATE the canons. I just love the old red cannons; the newer ones are just so-so - but those new ones - YUCK !!!

Still in love with the ship though  :love:

Bogro
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Pyrrhus on April 29, 2008, 22:27:18
What a marvelous picture you got, Cachalote!!!

Correct me if I am wrong, but I think morion helmets were used by the times by most European nations, so they seem to be well in these Portuguese soldiers. You are right in that the caravel was a larger ship... He, he, I would give the lil' ship to the pirates and the old 3550 pirate ship to the Portuguese...

I prefer to see the Portuguese crew with rapiers than with sabers, I think that by the XVI century (where I think this customization better fits) sabers were not yet as known, and double-edged swords were thin-bladed.

And talking about cannons... do you know of any pirate-line cannon without crests on the interior (for the grooves on the balls) and without the old shield with a cross in the outer surface (typical of the old pirates and Nuremberg mercenaries). That would be the perfect playmobil pirate cannon for me.

Do the "crest-on-cannon-and-groove-on-ball" arrangement proved to be less dangerous to kids than the old smooth cannon balls? I suppose that just making the metallic spring less powerful was sufficient if they wanted to desacelerate the shoot (and we would have more realistic cannons).
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: cachalote on April 30, 2008, 03:01:58
i would put this triangular sail caravela in the xv century instead of the xvi pyrrhus.  :yup:
bartolomeu dias used it to go as far as the cape of good hope (south africa) in 1488 but after that, they were just to small and fragile to go any further just by themselves.
they were still used in the xvi and even in the xvii century but the main navy boats were, by then, the naus.
although xvi century portuguese civil architecture is one of my areas of study i know very little about armament or military dressing from those days.
one thing i know, very litlle separated portugal from spain in clothes and weapons.
both countries even had the same saint as their patron in war - santiago (saint jacques) - causing a lot of confusion when both armies had to fight eachother shouting the name of the same saint.  8}
portugal then decided that its army should have 2 saints as war patrons - são jorge (sait george) when fighting the spanish, and santiago (saint jacques) when fighting everybody else (mainly the moors).
  :hmm:
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Pyrrhus on April 30, 2008, 16:34:21
Right, Cachalote, the triangular "latin" sails resemble more the caravel than the XVI century "square-sailed" ships as galleons. I was led to my "diagnosis" by the morions, though I really don't know if were common in the XV century.

I did't know Santiago meant "Saint Jacques" in French, I knew there is the name "Thiago" in Portuguese (which I think is likely related to the Spanish "Diego"; in Spanish both names are common, "Diego" and "Santiago"). So Thiago must mean Jacques, I suppose? (and, I know I am quite off-topic now, but it is a long time doubt to me... is Jack a diminutive for Jacques? is the name Jacques used in English the same as in French?)

Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: cachalote on May 01, 2008, 02:38:10
2 difficult question pyrrhus...  :hmm:

the portuguese name "tiago" descends form the hebrew "jacob".
from "jacob" you get "iago" (still rarely used in portugal and spain).
when the saint with this name "santo iago" becomes famous, you use only one word to name it - "santiago".
later, when you decide to separate again the "santo" from "iago", the "t" stays added and you get "tiago".
as far as i know the same root - "jacob" - makes several names in several languages:
- "jaime" and "jacó" in portuguese;
- "jaime" and diego" in spanish;
- "giacomo" in italian;
- "jacques" in french;
- "james" in english.

from what my wife tells me (she's half english) "jack" is used in america as a diminutive for "john" (although i fail to see how in can diminute a name maintaining the same number of letters).  ???
maybe another form - "jake" - has some link with "jacob", i don't know.
  ::)
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Gustavo on May 01, 2008, 16:37:07

as far as i know the same root - "jacob" - makes several names in several languages:
- "jaime" and "jacó" in portuguese;
- "jaime" and diego" in spanish;
- "giacomo" in italian;
- "jacques" in french;
- "james" in english.

from what my wife tells me (she's half english) "jack" is used in america as a diminutive for "john" (although i fail to see how in can diminute a name maintaining the same number of letters).  ???
maybe another form - "jake" - has some link with "jacob", i don't know.
  ::)

It's a common form to make -- not diminutives, but -- nicknames, in many languages, Cachalote. For example, Gustavo, in Portuguese, can have Guga as nick; Veronica is commonly called Nocas. And so on.

As for the forms of James, in many languages, here we go:

Iakob, Jakob, Jacob (Hebrew)

Yakov (Russian, & Slavonic languages)

Jacobus, -i (Latin)
 and from this
Iago (Italian, Spanish, through Shakespeare ...)
Diogo (Italian)
Giacomo (Italian)
Diego (Spanish)
Santiago (Spanish), in the names of cities
 (note here that the "t" belongs to the first word: Sant Iago
 but later became part of the name, after all: San Pedro, San Tiago ...)
Tiago (old Spanish form, & traditional Portuguese)
Tiago, Thiago (modern Portuguese; until the mid 1990s, Portuguese law didn't accept the form with an "h"; I don't know how things are nowadays ... It is very common in Brasil, but it's somewhat new (i.e., from people of my generation, 30 years old, and younger))
Jacó (Portuguese)
Jacques (French)

Jakob (German)
Jacob (English), nick: Jake

The forms below either come from the Italian name Giacomo
 or are an evolution in the same way of that name, in which
 "b" became "m" in prononciation
James (English) [almost forgot an important nickname: Jim]
Jaime (Portuguese)

These many forms in different languages happen with names widely used since the Christianization of Europe; there are different forms for some of the apostles: Peter, James & John, mainly; Thomas and Philip are also very frequently used, but their forms don't vary as much as the other three. (...)



The boat (4444, coming back to the subject ;) ) is very pretty, Cachalote ... Thanks for the pictures! Looking forward to getting one :) ... Simple, and has many uses!

 :wave:
G.--
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Pyrrhus on May 01, 2008, 17:18:10
Wow, thank you, pals!

It seems weird so many different derivations from the Hebrew Jacob, names as different as James, Jaime and Diego having the same root...

I think you are right Cachalote in that Jake is a diminutive for Jacob, because in English Jake sounds as the first sillab of Jacob. I heard also that Jack comes from John, does not seem to be a diminutive, but may be a nickname as "Chuck" is from "Charles".

To the list, there can be added:

"Giacoppo" (Italian) and "Jacobo" (Spanish). Santiago is also a common name for persons in Spanish-speaking countries.

Thank you and good luck.
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: BlackPearl2006 on September 18, 2011, 01:34:33
I just noticed that this 1st release of the 4444 style boat comes with 2 sets of flags:  it can fly a standard black jolly roger pirate flag, AND it also comes with a flag that has a blue field and white cross, centered over a a blue small blue shield with 3 golden fleurs-de-lis:  a FRENCH MERCHANT SHIP'S FLAG!!!!

(http://archive.gg.ca/heraldry/pub-reg/ProjectPics/v204_20070045_flag_FMF.jpg)
(http://www.playmofriends.com/forum/index.php?action=dlattach;topic=2057.0;attach=11633;image)

INTERESTING!

I always thought the captain of this boat seemed more french than anything to me.  (He is my favourite pirate clicky so far)
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: WarriorOfToys on September 18, 2011, 04:14:17
One of my favorite Pirates as well...
That is a very interesting fact... :o
Very cool too! I will use it as such from now on. ;D
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Giorginetto on September 18, 2011, 07:47:41
..hhmmm.. need to get meself a couple of these ..........  ;D ;D ;D ;D
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: playmo1989 on September 18, 2011, 08:06:02
too small in size ... when i bought it i was disapointed  :'(
 
 the two new ones have as base this part.... hmmm ... i hope they are larger we'll see (http://smileys.on-my-web.com/repository/Zen/zen-reading.gif) (http://smileys.on-my-web.com/repository/Zen/zen-reading.gif) (http://smileys.on-my-web.com/repository/Zen/zen-reading.gif) (http://smileys.on-my-web.com/repository/Zen/zen-reading.gif)
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Bolingbroke on September 18, 2011, 09:20:13
Very hard times if this is supposed to be a merchant ship. They can't even afford a new set of sails.  ::) ::) ::)
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: playmo1989 on September 19, 2011, 02:37:49
Very hard times if this is supposed to be a merchant ship. They can't even afford a new set of sails.  ::) ::) ::)

(http://smileys.on-my-web.com/repository/Laughing/hahaha-024.gif) (http://smileys.on-my-web.com/repository/Laughing/hahaha-024.gif) very true !!!!
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Hadoque on September 19, 2011, 03:04:27
Very hard times if this is supposed to be a merchant ship. They can't even afford a new set of sails.  ::) ::) ::)

That is why they turned to piracy  ;)
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: playmo1989 on September 19, 2011, 03:51:00
That is why they turned to piracy  ;)

who ?  ??? ???
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: bonniebeth on September 19, 2011, 03:55:01
These french merchants. ;)
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: playmo1989 on September 19, 2011, 04:52:02
These french merchants. ;)
   
 ;)
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Giorginetto on September 19, 2011, 07:02:12

who ?  ??? ???

Some aliens from space  me reckons !!!  :lol:
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Bolingbroke on September 19, 2011, 08:06:19
He he he.

It would be great if PM were to start bundling such sets with an alternative set of (plain) sails.
Title: Re: 4444 Kanonensegler
Post by: Elric on September 20, 2011, 17:30:57
Apart from the sail, this cannon boat is the most complete of the cannon boats released so far. I love the way you can lower and raise the flag. I like that comes with more rigging than other cannon boats.