Saturday, December 28, 2013

Sheer Joy? Sheer Clamps, Anyway

Finally, a day arrived in which we:

1.  Made no thickened epoxy; and
2.  Laid no fiberglass tape

Hurray!  But never fear - those days will return.  What we did instead was attach the first piece of the keel at the bow and glued the major piece of the starboard sheer clamp.  A sheer clamp is a piece of wood that runs along the hull where the decking will meet the hull.  It helps keep the hull's shape and reinforces the boat against bumps and the constant pull of the sail.

After we laid epoxy on the wood and the hull, Dad started the clamping.

LOTS of clamps needed, since we had to bend the wood along the curve of the hull


One piece down, and no more clamps so we must wait until the epoxy dries before starting on the port side.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Another Day in Epoxy Paradise

They say it's a wooden boat.  It is a wooden boat. But pound for pound, I think it will be mostly glue!  This is some of the inside work that got done over the last few months.
You see floor timbers and longitudinal pieces in the cockpit.  Floorboards will go down in the center, and the sides will be benches will storage compartments underneath.

This is in the cabin.  "Cabin" I should say, for reasons that are becoming increasingly obvious.  Remember when little Ralphie (the Simpsons) exclaimed, "I sleep in a drawer!"  It'll be like that.  And yes, there's a big box in the middle.  That's where the centerboard pulls up into.