When last we left my PocketShip build, I had the seatback stringers
strewn around the house and the backyard. The table saw remained outside
for another week or so before the threat of rain forced me to haul it
back in. In the meantime, I finished up my first semester of grad
school and threatened to quit my job (more than once). It looks like St. Martin will be the destination of choice.
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A cat sitting at anchor in a St. Martin bay. |
St. Martin has always been a top Caribbean destination for me. The beaches, dual-languages, and flawless weather combine for an eclectic mix of awesome. The idea that I'd be trading my view of Minneapolis for the bridgedeck of a 42' cruising catamaran is too much anticipation for my own good.
For now, I'll set those dreams aside and catch people up to the build. I'll present these in "area" order, not necessarily chronologically. Figuring it was time to work on the bow, I spent a weekend prepping this area. Part of what I had to do was finish the bevel at the very tip. This came up a little short so had to plug in some timber, sand it, epoxy, and let it set. Given how visible this is, I wanted to get it right, and was pleased with the final result.
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The tip cured in place and faired. |
Once that was set, I could turn my attention to the rest of the area. I sanded down what I could and added 6 oz 'glass per the instructions. It didn't go on as scarily as I first thought, but it did take quite a few darts to ensure a proper fold and fit. With some new found frogtape skills, I wound up with some nice clean lines.
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Final prep before 'glass. |
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'glass gets dry fit. Lots of darts made this OK. |
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Wetted out (First coat). Cut away the extra a little after this. |
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View forward. The little dots of course are the screw tops filled with epoxy. |
After this cured, I added 9 oz 'glass to the vertical area
just behind the tabernacle as well as a strip right where the bow deck
meets the forward cabin wall. This is in response to some reports of
failure at this spot. It looks and feels pretty secure now. I added two more epoxy layers to 'fill the weave' then prepped for the dorade boxes and breasthook.
The upper breasthook was a very satisfying piece to install. This took a little work with the lines, roundovers, jigsaw, and sanding. I also epoxy'd the downward-face because I wasn't sure I'd have good access to it later. Once settled, it settled nicely. Four two inch stainless steel screws hold this in place at the bow whereas the 600lb Irwins hold up the rear. I plan to keep this bright for a splash of sapele at the bow. With care, this will look terrific.
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Breasthook installed. Took only a little bit of work, much less than the lower breasthook. |
Once that sat to cure, I turned to the seatbacks. Most of the time for this part was spent getting the right measurements so that it was the same height off the deck and from the transom. If I cut a wrong hole here, I'd be in trouble. The idea of looking at cross-eyed locker openings was almost too much to bear. Once or twice, I thought about leaving this solid all the way around just to avoid a mistake. But alas, this is boatbuilding, and as I've said a couple times before, sometimes you just gotta jump.
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Ring gets dry fit before epoxy. Note the pencil marks. This wasn't easy. |
The trick here (for me) was to ensure the seatback locker ring is perfectly smooth on the inside. This is easier said than done as the kit leaves all these little nubs that need to be sanded off. Once removed, the ring needs to be faired. This is to ensure that the router can use the ring as a pattern. Otherwise, you're looking at a wavy mess with a jigsaw or a lot of wrist wringing with a keyhole saw or whatever. The ring prep was worth it and I came away with a really nice set of locker holes.
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Used a router with a flush trim bit to cut this away. Surprisingly good. |
In the end, the seatbacks are some of my proudest accomplishments to
date. They are dead perfect! Well, perfect enough. A nice little roundover and sanding and
they're about ready to be installed. I test fit the locker dashboards (visible with the speaker inside the locker) and I'm able to insert and remove them without too much hassle even with the seatbacks installed, which is the plan.
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The cockpit-facing side got a roundover and sanding. The locker-facing side got a sanding. I also test fit the locker dashboard. |
Something I've been dreading for awhile finally had to be tackled. These are the cleats that support the cabin deck (the "roof"). These cleats are made of timber that get epoxy'd to the upper edges of the forward and aft cabin walls. They need to match the rake of the cabin where it meets the hull and the size of the notches cut into bulkhead two. They also need to be left a little proud so they can be planed down and accept the cabin roof. In other words, they're a real pain in the saw. Jon, a fellow builder, warned to do the cleats before the two long cleats that span the opening.
Given I ignored some other early advice from him and others, I glommed onto this one and only cut the spanning cleats a couple days ago. I can say the advice was great. It allowed me to get the angles right instead of fighting the spans in the way. I later cut away what I needed to cut from the cleats.
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Test fit of the span. The two spanning timbers will be padauk. With the cabin 'roof' white, this will look like rafters. Have to be careful to keep the padauk presentation-worthy during this process. |
The first thing to do is to measure out the length of the cleat of the aft cabin wall. The first attempt wasn't wide enough. Because the angle from hull to top is so steep, it takes more wood to reach those heights than I thought. I'm writing this from memory, but for those who want a little advice, be sure to use at least 3" width. There should also be a 5 degree rake to accept the hull angle and a 30 degree rake to accept the aft cabin wall. These are complicated angles, and complicated angles call for complicated men.
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First pattern for the aft cabin wall cleat. This wound up going into the scrap pile. |
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Bulkhead 2 cabin 'roof' cleats cure. Note this does not have the spanning cleats, per advice from other builders. |
Once those cured, I prepped the bow area for dorade installation. Keen eyes will note the sanded 9 oz reinforcement 'glass here. I used a protractor to ensure both angles were good (they were) but the only way I could get the angles to work was to have the forward dorade wall ride a little high against the hull. Meaning, I'll need to install some blocking to accept the cabin deck. Overall, this is the area where I had the most trouble, the timber that runs along the hull. They're too low by maybe 1/2" to 3/4" and I'm going to have to laminate these taller to accept the cabin deck. Before that, I need to do a deep dive in the cabin itself and work out the epoxy issues in there. Not. Looking. Forward.
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Dorade box wired up. Tack welds followed. |
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Dorade box tack welded together. |
After a little bit of time, I let the tack welds cure and pulled out the wires. I then installed the dorade cleats, which continues the fun of the cabin decking. I also put the big blocking inside here which will be the place cleats will secure onto, but that photo got corrupted somehow so isn't here. In the meantime, I laid down some structural epoxy on the inside, though not the outside yet. Next steps would be to drill out the dorade hole that enters the cabin (yikes!) and a 3/4" hole to lead the wires into the forward locker. The dorade box is where the nav lights will install and where the solar panels will run down to the controller.
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Cabin 'roof' cleats get epoxy'd in. |
Satisfied for now, I then spent an hour cutting up the last remnants of my insulation. I wound up taking most of these out as I had to install the spinnaker blocks and epoxy those in place, but it wasn't too bad. I only have the port side insulation done as I ran out and haven't been to the Big Box Store in awhile.
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Stuffed with foam. I thought about running some wires forward but ultimately did not. |
I installed the stern and spinnaker blocks, too, made out of ash. This wasn't too bad. The worst part was ensuring that the thickened epoxy didn't get everywhere. It was a bit of a tight fit and I realized I'd be better off with a slightly smaller block that I could clamp into place vs. trying to squeeze something in perfectly. And when I mean slightly smaller, I mean like 1/16" of an inch.
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Stern block goes in. The manual shows a 1" hole cut into this now instead of later to accept the boom gallows pole, but undecided if I want to do that. Doing it now would mean I'd be able to prep it (epoxy, etc) but runs the risk of not being centered. |
I also worked on the transom skirt with the final bit of thickened epoxy there.
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Thick bit of thickened epoxy holding the transom skirt in place. This got cleaned up after the photo. |
The other end of it got some thickened epoxy applied into the gaps and then sanded down and faired. This went really well and gives me hope that the hull joints are going to be OK.
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Any time I had extra epoxy, I put some into the random joints and screw holes around the hull. This is the transom skirt, which I sanded back down and faired. It looks and feels pretty good. |
It was right about here that I opened the door into the garage and found this guy perched on my clamp box. I don't know how long he was in here, but I didn't notice any work done, so I wasn't happy. You'd think if he was going to hang around the boatshop, he'd do a little sanding. But no.. stupid bird.
I took a few photos of him then tired of him so I opened the garage door from where I stood. Instead of flying out like a normal bird, he took off over my head and into my house where I spent the next 20 minutes trying to get him to fly back outside.
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He probably spent a few hours in the garage, and not a single friggin thing was done. Stupid bird. |
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From the garage to the living room floor. Stupid bird. |
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This is in my fake tree in the sunroom at the back of the house. Stupid bird. |
Finally, he found his way out and I could continue the build. I started this session by installing some of the electronics and support things. In the photo below, I've got a drain plug, horn, clam, horn button, and speaker hooked up. This is the starboard 'dashboard' and will also house the RAM3, which will come up through the laz, through the clam shell, and connect at the marked area just above the speaker. I'd originally intended to install a 12v set here but didn't have enough room. It was one of those compromises I had to make. The clam was siliconed and screwed down. It should be fairly watertight, but it will dump into the laz area so will be OK.
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Tight fit but it all works. |
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Prepped for painting. |
With the electronics dry fit on both sides, I painted three coats of primer and then the leftover Snowbound paint from the fall. The paint was still good and this came out nice.
When I went to actually install the seatbacks, I noticed that I was off by maybe an inch on both the port and starboard sides. Not sure how that happened. The curves seem OK and this is from a kit. I recall that the cockpit deck, too, was slightly "short" so my boat appears to have a waterline of 13' 11" instead of 13' 10" per the specs. There isn't a cleat back here (one isn't called for in the manual). I didn't want to put in a really thick piece and gum it up with epoxy, so I decided to extend the seatback.
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Just a bit short. Thought about this for awhile. |
Here is the piece from the kit that matches up with the seatback. It's slightly off but close enough to make a pattern. I wound up cutting four identical pieces on the bandsaw: Two for the extension, and two to form a butt joint to connect it to the seatback.
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Found the bit from the kit that matched up. Saved a few moments of measuring. |
The view from the top shows that it'll work fine. I'm not too worried about the "lines" getting mucked up; I doubt anyone will be able to tell my seatbacks are an inch longer than they're supposed to be. Once set, cured, sanded, and painted, it'll be a seamless fix.
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Seatback 'extension' one for each side. The other side of this has a butt joint getting epoxy'd down. |
And if all this month's work wasn't enough, I also started pulling apart the MacGregor.
This is the view of the inside after we stripped it of some really
gnarly carpet and woodworking, but before I pulled the rest of this crap
out and wiped everything clean. The idea is to hit all of this with
Kilz and whitewash it. New fabrics, electrical, furniture, and other assorted
upgrades will make this cruiser ready in a few weeks.
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About 1/4 way through the demo. We don't call this the HGTV boat for nothing. |
The
outside of the boat, too, is getting an overhaul. This will be Islander
no more. There's a new logo and name forthcoming. Stay tuned for more
news, some of it about PocketShip.
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A bittersweet picture. The previous owner I'm sure thought long and hard about the logo and the name. |