Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Something new - fiberglass!

The cabin top gets so-called Dynel cloth (which is what we put on the hull), and remaining deck surfaces fiberglass cloth. 

Friday, September 25, 2015

Coaming in July

I left out a good month of boat work, I just realized!  Back in the summer, aside from putting decking on and putting the top on the cabin, we also did the coaming. This entailed milling some cedar from the property, installing some supporting pieces in the cockpit, then trying to bend the dang things enough to fit in place!  And what is their place?  As longitudinal pieces in the cockpit, that serves as both the backrest and the anchor for the aft decking. 
We also tried wet towels...



Ooh, aft decking and coaming finished!  Pretty. And what a nice curve!


Tuesday, June 30, 2015

A Cabin (for Hobbits)

The boat starts to look a lot more complete when you start to put the decking on!  The cabin now has a roof, and sides and it IS possible to sit up (ish) inside. :). There is certainly room enough to lay!



Tuesday, June 16, 2015

An Itsy-bitsy, teeny-weeny, shorty-porty cabin

Working on the cabin now and wondering if the boat mightn't be better off without it.  Still, if it's pouring rain, two people could conceivably shimmy their way in and get out of the rain.  
And I guess we will need a place for beer. :)



Sunday, July 13, 2014

Getting the Lead In


I think the Postal Service might have been a teensy bit dismayed when ten of their small flat-rate boxes were filled with 50 pounds of LEAD each. Ballast. :)

Putting the ballast in the boat required a little... Are you ready for this, my former physics students???  CALCULATIONS!  Of moments (torque)!  Omg, it has a use!


Putting the ballast in the boat was interesting... Mixing the pellets up with epoxy made it seem like a very heavy, toxic form of caviar. But then, I've never been much for caviar anyway. 


Friday, June 13, 2014

Getting prettier!



It's been slow going, but we're starting to realize that it really is turning into a boat. :)  We're finishing up putting 3 layers of epoxy on pretty much everything, cutting parts out of the bulkheads that need to go and cutting floorboards.  I am so grateful for Dad (of course you know it's Dan writing this!)... while I'm at school working, he is here also working hard on so many things, but among them is figuring out all the little details - where will the battery go?  How will the rudder attach?  Where do we put the anchor and how do we strengthen the bow?  He's very smart, and he always knows what's next to do.

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Putting Holes in the Hull. Again.

Once you've spent time ensuring that the hull is smooth, the fiberglass cloth is even, and the primer is perfect, you put more holes in it to attach the keel. Yup. 



We finished the sheer clamps, which run along the hull to help it hold its shape and strengthen it, and then glued and screwed on the keel pieces. 

While Jay put the screws in from inside the boat, I bent the long keel piece into place.