Showing posts with label garage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label garage. Show all posts

Monday, August 17, 2020

Sandy Bottoms

The last few days have been a blur with many lost hours sanding and re-sanding this enormous boat.  There hasn't been much of an update on this because the incremental progress doesn't translate well to photos or writing or mental health.

Since the big fiberglass episode of 2020, I've sanded the whole hull down to a dull grey, as described.  The manual describes "a full day" could be dedicated to sanding the hull, but it was really more than a week, 2-3 hours a session.  I simply don't have the stamina or the patience to dedicate more than that.  But it got done partly with the help of podcasts.

As a side note, I never really got into podcasts.  I'm the perfect demographic for it, but as a hyper-visual learner, the idea of listening instead of reading never really appealed to me.  Faced with the hours-long choice of the shopvac or the dulcet tones of a journalist or storyteller and maybe learning something, I opted for the latter.

I started with Serial: Season One (the one that really started it all); NASA We Have a Podcast; 1619; The Sultanate (a podcast from an expat in Oman where I will be moving this fall); Every Little Thing; and a couple others.  It really makes the sanding just a bit more enjoyable, and I feel like I've entered a new realm of cultural awareness.  Don't get me wrong -- sanding still sucks, and I'm not listening to podcasts when I'm not sanding, but it is a much better enterprise.  To put the hours in perspective, I finished Serial: Season One and at least a couple dozen sessions of the others during this sanding effort.  Gird your loins, fellas!

Here's the start of it with about a third of one side done sanded down.  This took about 3 hours.  I used 80 grit to get the first stuff down and went over it again with 120 where needed.

 
After awhile, I moved to the topsides and got as far as this before putting down the Bosch and thinking about actually sailing.

Luckily, Chris, a fellow PocketShip builder who lives in the area asked if I wanted to go for a run.  And how!  So after a couple scheduling stops and starts, we were off on a spirited day on Lake Waconia, getting back just ahead of sunset, but not after a great dinner at a lakeside restaurant.




I promised not to pepper Chris with too many questions, but I was just getting back into the flow of things and needed answers.  He was more than happy to oblige, as always, and I'm grateful to call him a friend and source of motivation.  His boat still looks amazing after almost 10 years.

I still had the beast in the garage to deal with, along with a couple logistical problems.  The first was to deal with the various layers.  While sanding, these layers become exposed as lines which are actually small depressions where two layers meet up.  It can be difficult to sand these down well because it's easy to burn too deeply through a layer of glass.  I knew this would be the tradeoff between a horizontal 'glassing job (where you take the 'glass and spread it aft-forward instead of across the beam) so I wasn't surprised to see it.  There's also a risk that the painting will not be entirely uniform over these areas.  Time will tell.


One area that did surprise me was this fenced area on the port side.  For some reason the epoxy here was really light.  A quick rub with the sander exposed fiberglass layers and a sheen underneath.  I can only conclude that I didn't apply a second or third layer here -- and this was only really discovered after sanding it down a bit.

So, out came the epoxy and a couple wasted hours!  This of course needed to be sanded down again, along with a couple small patches because why not.


Meanwhile, I was thinking about how to level the keel.  It's kind of tough to see from the above photo but I spent a couple days figuring this out.  I have a much bigger garage than I did when I started this (I literally moved next door a few years ago) but a much smaller house.  That meant stuff wound up in the garage and in practice my workspace is much smaller.
 
I used a couple small 2-ton jacks and jackstands I was going to return to Amazon to flatten the keel.  The tradeoff was I couldn't use the furniture dollies as I couldn't get the bow high enough to level it out.  After a few hours over a couple days, here is the result:

The angle of the photo is actually a bit off.  The middle bubble is centered and the boat lies flat.  The photo reminds me of a little spaceship hovering over the grey landscape of a moon.  Of course, just after this photo, I bumped the keel and the spaceship fell off and disappeared into the garage.  I still haven't found it.  Whatever.  Onto painting!

Tuesday, July 14, 2020

The Rise of Sun Monkey

A lifetime ago, I shut down PocketShip production for a job that would take me away from everything I'd known for the last 10 years.  Two years in Nigeria and two years in China later, with a year in Washington in between, and here we are, back in the garage!

I never knew when I'd be able to come back to it, if ever, except maybe if I found a job in Washington where I could drag the dregs of the boat from garage to garage and hope my work hours and neighbors allowed me to sand at all hours of the night.  But thanks(?) to the COVID situation, where all training has moved online, I'm back in Minnesota at least through October and maybe longer.

When I moved the last time, I packed up most of my stuff and shipped it to storage.  This included all of my shop gear:  sanders, drill press, table saw, routers, clamps, miter saw, horses, etc, etc.  I'm pretty much devoid of all.  I can pull the stuff out of storage, but it'll take $300 and 3 months to get here, and that doesn't seem worth it.  So what to do?  Order more stuff, I guess.

I prioritized a new orbital sander and a shop vac.  Then I got on the horn with Ed at CLC and asked what he recommended to finish the boat.  Three days, 26 yards of 'glass, and a MAS epoxy kit later, I'm back in business.  Interestingly, there was a little pamphlet with the MAS kit that said the little pumps were not available due to COVID.  With supply chains disrupted they gave detailed instructions on how to pour into cups and mix them that way.  That will not be fun.


I also dug up all sorts of memories: all the lines, the lovely portholes and anchor chocks, the electronics, tiller, boom gallows, and even stuff off the old MacGregor that didn't make it to the Sea Scouts.  It was a trip down memory lane!  I even found my old paint.  Unopened, I'm sure they're OK.  I think?


I then dusted off the hull from whatever's been on it.  Still a little work to do here.



One place I didn't go was into the cabin itself.  I'm afraid to look in there as I fear something's camped in the cabin before I could.  But a little fear is good:  it keeps people motivated to take care but keep going.  And I plan to keep going as far as I can in the short time I have.

Sun Monkey rises again!

Friday, January 17, 2014

So Happy I Could Cry -- and Probably Will

Just a quick note to share some good news.

Today is one of the nicest days of the winter. Crisp, clear, bright sunshine, and even the snow looks wonderful as it boughs off the trees and out into the yard. But it's also 9 degrees - albeit that's about 40 degrees (not exaggerating!) warmer than it was last week, and that means yet another lost day counting down to warmer weather.

View outside living room window. Yes, it's pretty, but I'll see this until June.

Today, however, I installed this:


Here:

Panarama shot. Normally this mode is for mountains and sea views, not 10' garages. The cushions are from the Macgregor, stored here for the winter. I'll need to find a new home for them!

All I can say is wow. It's been running now for about 3 hours since the electricians left. It's warm in there. I can work in there. I'm so happy I could cry, and probably will. There's a good 40 degree temperature gradient between the floor and the ceiling but that's OK, that'll get better. It meant I had to install 220v and can never have an electric range but I don't care! I'll microwave everything from now on.

It's a Fahrenheat 54 (clever, those Fahrenheat people are -- get it? Is this Celsiheat in Europe?), got it on sale at Mills Fleet farm where they kicked in a $25 gift card for no good reason at all. I could hug it if I didn't want to burn myself. Seriously, some of the best dollars I've spent in a long time, and that includes the Costco hot dog I splurged on last week.