Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Week 8-9

This week, Eric decided that he wanted to make a closer inspection of the CB box in hopes to have the boat sailing this summer. Upon closer inspection, it was found that the vertical pieces that make up the box were rotten and the box would need to be removed, taken apart, and salvaged where able.

To remove the box, Barrett Snow hopped in with his skill saw and cut through the drift pins and everything, removing each lateral section at a time. Then, the rest was chiseled out around the old keel bolts. Having the old keelson out was a blessing in disguise, because it enabled me to better access the broken keel bolts all along the keel and pound them out. If we hadn't removed the keel, those would have stayed in the boat rotting away.

Also having the keelson out, I was able to make patterns of seven floor timbers that needed to be replaced. Five new ones were cut out and fit up FWD and two are in the process of being fit AFT. Once these were fitted, I removed all the new oak going back in the boat and sealed them in epoxy. Then, they were screwed back into placed with bedding compound.

As a side project, I began working on building up the shaft of an oar lock where it had previously worn away from use so that we can have new bronze ones cast. This process was a little tricky but I ended up making a mold using a block of hard wood and drilling out the appropriate sized hole. A product called Marine Tex was used to build it up.


Friday, February 17, 2012

Week 8-9 Pictures

Some pictures of Surf Boats in action at Camp Viking circa 1960s











The top of the centerboard box is removed to better assess the condition of the centerboard box



The vertical pieces of the box were thoroughly rotten



A couple keel bolts are pounded out.



Lots of corrosion! 90% of them were broken in half.



The centerboard box is removed.



Barrett Snow jumps in to do the dirty work.



Within minutes, it is out of the boat.



Here are some old floors that were removed



The old floors are used as patterns on new oak.



And glued up overnight.



Here are five new floors cut and fit to shape



And brought back to the shop to get sealed in epoxy



I made a special jig to increase the oar lock shaft back to its original diameter so we can have more cast.






Wednesday, February 1, 2012

week 6-7

A lot happened these two weeks. In preparation for a new piece of Mahogany keel, I had to chop out the old floor timber aft under the deck. The nut came right off the keel bolt and I was able to tap it through the keel without many problems. The floor came out easily after that. I was able to use the old pieces to trace a pattern and cut out a shiny new timber. Once this was removed I was able punch out the two keel bolts that were still attached in the keel that also went through the stem. Once these were out, there was nothing holding the keel in place since all the other bolts have rusted apart between the keelson and keel.

Using my trust Japanese saw, I cut off a five foot section of split keelson and prepped the remaining surface with my block plane and a sander. The old piece will be helpful to use as a patter for the new one to be put in later. With this piece out, I was better able to assess the broken keel bolt situation, which doesn't seem too drastic. I should be able to punch the remainders of the bolts out from the top while providing support from the bottom.

A couple days this week, Pascal came by and began reefing out the seams under the water line. By the end of the week, we had all the seams cleaned out and most of the 5200 put over then scraped off. You will notice in the photos that some of the seams in between the planks are fairly wide. We're hoping that these will swell up when she's put in the water. We have been thinking about putting her in early to get her to swell up before we put new cotton back in.

There was some small repairs down to the aft hood ends on the STBD side using epoxy and another 100 bronze #12 screws were put in throughout the Port side where the previous fasteners had failed.

I was able to remove and re-make three backing blocks out of new white oak and get them installed as well as begin the repairs to two sections of broken cap rail at the oar lock brackets. One of these repairs was made with epoxy and clamps, whereas the other has been cut out and a new piece will be fit in place.

Eric was busy visiting Beetle, Inc on the mainland and came back with two beautiful Sitka Spruce spars. The mast will fit perfectly in the surf boat step and needs only slight modifications.

Looking ahead, I plan to finish the keelson repairs, scarph in some new floors FWD where they have cracked at the keel, begin sanding the bottom, and ordering lumber for new sole beams.