Saturday, March 19, 2011

A brief intermission...

My goal is to use this blog to document what I'm working on, and keep myself motivated, hopefully with a post or two a week.  This past week I haven't managed to do anything boat wise, because I've been working on my back porch.  Last winter, during the hard freeze Austin received, the water pipes feeding the spickets in the porch ceiling broke, necessitating some emergency repairs.  Finally it's time to close up the pine tongue and grove ceiling.  Once that's done it's back to sanding, sanding, sanding...

Friday, March 11, 2011

Not my natural color...

I managed to get in about an hour of sanding yesterday after work, the weather was perfect for practically any outdoor activity.  As you can see, sanding can be quite dusty.  I try not to sand on back to back days because it's pretty harsh on the skin.


I'm down to my last round of 100 grit, and this weekend I fully intend to stock up, this time on 80 grit.  There are a few spots that could stand some tough love, especially under the waterline but above water, if you catch my drift.  For some reason, the paint in that area is much harder than the stuff that's spent 12 years under water.

I had a little helper for a brief moment.. he didn't really achieve much though.

Something that's been interesting to see is the many layers of bottom paint.  I think I counted 6 layers on the waterline, and you can see here that the undermost pain was red, followed by a couple more coats of red, and then most recently the blue / green.  When the bottom gets paint, I'm going to go with the original color scheme of red bottom, blue waterline, and white top.

Some other tricks I have been considering: sanding the area directly "under" the chine, forward where the chine curves up and in.  "My" orbital sander is a 5 incher, and it's way too big to get in there.  I'm thinking belt sander, or (hopefully not) sanding by hand.  Also, the blocks will have to be moved one by one.  I almost think that although the outer supports can be easily worked, the three railroad tie stacks might stay where they are until the boat heads back to the water.

 As things move forward, my next projects are replacing the rotten board in the transom (and any related rot found), and replacing the canvas cabin top.  Both projects seem simple but almost certainly will be a tangled web.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Origin 2: More Origin

Every time someone new sees the boat in our backyard, they always say something like "Holy s$%*! How'd you get that in here?"  I always say, "Well, I paid a guy..".  The larger point though is that my home is on a corner lot, and along one side, the fence has a gate cut into it.  With the gate open, it was relatively easy to back the boat in.  The next question people invariably ask is "Does it run?" to which I reply "It was floating when I got it.", thus summing up the state and condition of the project.  Now that I've contacted the previous owner and gotten some back story, I sometimes add "Not since the late '80s."
You can see the lock on the gate in the very middle of the fence, plenty of room!
I mentioned a surprise in the first origin post, and it is true that shortly after we acquired this boat, we found out we were going to acquire something else, too.  I won't put the picture here (because I'm lazy), but this explains our new delivery on March 23rd 2010. http://www.flickr.com/photos/chaoticwhimsey/4476892812/in/set-72157623735350302/

So with that happening, then some job instability, etc, the project got off track quite a bit in 09 and 10.  Things are looking up for 2011, though!

(You might be saying to yourself, well, you lazy <expletive deleted>, on a beautiful Saturday morning why aren't you out there getting on it right now?  And that's a great question, which I will answer in two parts: it just stopped raining, so everything is soaking wet, and the wife is out running errands, so I'm supervising the littles.  Life always interrupts.)

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Add one more thing to the list...

The previous owner had removed some of the stainless steel trim and put it in a pvc tube, then put the tube in the cabin.  It was in the way, so after relocation to our yard, I moved the tube onto the port side walkway.  Yesterday I was in the back yard, and noticed that the tube had slid a little bit and was drooping over the bow.  Then, yesterday evening, I saw the tube had slipped and I thought I'd better get up there and put it back.  This is what I found:
This window is presumably the original, so it lasted 52 years before my laziness let it be broken.

Naturally I had some choice words to say.

Let this be a lesson to us all: a small problem fixed soon enough will prevent bigger problems later on.

In the grand scheme of things, this isn't the end of the world, but it is extremely frustrating.  I think the windows will need some attention at some point - I have read about similar models and window configurations that leak consistently.  Now it's just one more item on the check list.