Monday, May 28, 2012

A Declaration

After yesterday's deck and spar work, I was pretty motivated today.  For starters, I trimmed the decks to fit the hull, and sanded them smooth.  Then we set sawhorses under the hull and flipped it over, to begin work on the exterior. The goal is to "radius" the seams - that is, to turn them from angular meetings of two sheets of plywood, to gently curved transitions that can be smoothly covered with glass tape.

Using my trusty 4-in-hand file, some 60-grit sandpaper, and the block plane, I proceeded to radius the entire length of all three seams in about an hour and a half.  It went much faster than anticipated, but I suspect I'm going to be really, really sore tomorrow.

Soon - maybe even later today - I'll make a small batch of filleting epoxy and touch up the gaps in the seams.  Then it will be time to glass 'em, and do the final epoxy-coating of the exterior.

Translation:  I'm within sight of completing the hull.  Emboldened by this realization, I've decided to state publicly that I will launch this boat in June. 

There, I said it.  And now it remains to be seen whether I can put my money where my mouth is.  Stay tuned....

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Decks On! And Sail Test-Fit to Spars

With a bit of time this morning, I glued and nailed the fore & aft decks onto the hull.  This is another milestone moment, at it indicates we're pretty much done with the right-side-up segment of the build. 

The decks were cut pretty accurately to the plan dimensions.  Installed, they overhang the sheer a little, which indicates that either they weren't cut as accurately as I thought, or the hull is slightly narrower than it should be.  Either way, we're talking about a relatively small discrepancy, so I won't worry about it.  I'll just cut/sand the overhang off, and nobody will ever know.
I mixed up way more epoxy/fiberglass powder glue than I needed, so after I was done nailing down the decks, I stirred some silica powder into the remaining epoxy and used it as a fairing compound to fill gaps and smooth lines around the handles and deck beams. 

Next up for the hull: we'll pull it out of the porch, invert it on saw horses, and radius the chines in preparation for the exterior glass tape.  When that step is done, it will be time for a final coat of epoxy, then paint!  

The other big news is that I scored a twelve-foot length of bamboo at the second-hand building materials shop yesterday.  Cost me all of $3.22, which is less than a tenth of what it would  elsewhere.  It's too thin to use as anything but a spar, and may not be stout enough for that, even.  But it's a thick-walled variety, and seems quite strong.  So I'm going to try it.  If it breaks in use, we'll just replace it with something else.

I fitted it to a crotch I'd cut earlier, and pinned and lashed them as per the plans.  I must say, I'm a bit nervous about that joint.  But Wharram says it will hold, so who am I to argue?

With two spars ready, and the sail more or less complete, I couldn't help arranging it in the back yard to see how it looks.  With Puff the cat supervising, I laced the sail onto the spars until I ran out of line about 3/5ths of the way around.  It looks handsome, but I must confess that my new bamboo spar may be about 6" too short. 

As disappointing as that is, I can still use it as part of my hiking platform.  It certainly won't be wasted.  But that means I need to figure out how to fit a Y-joint to the carbon fiber windsurfer mast.  I might end up using store-bought lumber to make that piece, as I can't imagine turning a chunk of found lumber into the perfectly round 1.75" dowel required to fit the inside of the mast.

Friday, May 25, 2012

Another Wharram Melanesia Build: Photos From New Caledonia

I had a brief exchange with Jean-Philippe, the builder of the Melanesia featured in the most recent video, and he pointed me towards a photo set of his build and finished boat, Du Ami.  The photos are on his Facebook page. One might need a Facebook account to view them, I'm not sure.

As you can see, he's done a great job.  Highlights include real mylar sailcloth, bamboo spars & poles, and a sensible paint job to minimize brightwork and the associated maintenance headaches.

Note the clean fillets on this frame.  Jean-Philippe's handiwork seems to have generally been more competent than my blundering - perhaps he's done this before?  Or maybe he's just a really quick learner.
On the left beside the hull here, you can see his ama, which he laminated from store-bought lumber.  It's so much straighter than my tree trunk....  I also see that he enclosed his bow and stern with bulkheads to create buoyancy/storage compartments.  I'd really like to do that to my Melanesia, but I haven't yet decided if it's worth the extra effort....  It sure looks good, though.

Oh, and the result?  I'll let him speak for himself here, describing the shakedown cruise in one of the photo comments:
It sails pretty well we can sail near the wind, we can tack and jybe. We had a peak speed of 5,7 kts with 10 kts of wind (13kts in gusts). Really happy for a first ride.

Anyway, great work, Jean Philippe!  I would be thrilled to achieve such a result in my build.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

A New Wharram Melanesia Video on Youtube



We've seen just a little bit of JIPE98's Melanesia before, but he's really cooking in this one.  The blurb beneath the video states that he hit 8.4 knots on this run from Ouemo to Uere, New Caledonia.  That's really cooking for a 16' outrigger canoe!

The video appears to have been shot handheld by his crew, and details of his one-handed steering setup hover just outside the frame.  But there are some stills of the canoe from above at the end of the video, and she's a very nice-looking example.

I look forward to seeing more of this Melanesia in the future.  It looks like he's got a great boat, and a beautiful setting to sail in.



Meanwhile, in my own build, I wasn't able to apply further coats of epoxy to my fiberglass-taped fillets yesterday because a cold front blew through, bringing 50°F temps and a day of much-needed rain.  So I continued stitching the second rope to my sail, which is almost complete now.  Today looks favorable for epoxy work - higher temperatures, at least, and the rain has ended.  So I hope to be able to finish coating the fillet glass today, and move on to installing the decks tomorrow.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Glass Tape Success

The last time I worked with fiberglass tape on my brother's Bolger Teal build, it was a complete debacle.  We ended up with kinked, gappy glass that really wasn't doing the joint any favors; after getting about 20% of the chines done, we abandoned the glass tape all together.  So it was with some trepidation that I began taping the fillets on my Melanesia.

Surprisingly, it turned out really well, and I was able to do all three fillets in a single 90-minute session.  I was using a cheap disposable paint brush (bristles, not foam) and unadulterated epoxy.  Here's the process:
  • Cut a piece of fiberglass tape to the proper length for each section.
  • Mix a small batch of epoxy, so it doesn't thicken before you get the chance to use it all.  
  • Brush epoxy over one section of fillet and the surrounding ply, a little wider than the width of the tape.
  • Apply the tape to the fillet.  Get the position right, then press the tape into the epoxy.  
  • Smooth it out with gloved fingers, being careful to press it firmly against the fillet and wet it out thoroughly.
  • Brush more epoxy over the cloth until it looks uniformly wet and transparent.
  • Repeat for the next section of fillet, mixing more epoxy as necessary.
Looking back at our bad experience on the Teal, I think the difference lies in the smooth fillets.  We were trying to glass a sharp corner on a curved line, and the glass just didn't like taking that shape.  It was like folding paper - you can bend paper, and you can crease it, but you can't bend creased paper.  So the glass wrinkled. 

The glass will all but disappear when it gets
a couple more coats of epoxy over it.
The fillets are smooth curves, and the curve of the chines are smooth as well, so the Melanesia doesn't ask the glass tape to do anything it can't do, and the process is much easier.  But I am glad I put in all that work to get the fillets ready.  I suspect it would have gone badly if I'd been trying to glass over the undulations and lips they had before the sanding.

When the epoxy is set but not entirely cured, I'll brush another coat or two over it until the weave of the cloth is completely encased.  And just like that, the interior fillets will be done.

Monday, May 21, 2012

The Joy of Sanding

On the list of books nobody ever wrote, The Joy of Sanding has to be pretty near the top.  It's simple drudgery.  But if you don't like sanding, you probably shouldn't build a boat, and if you build a boat despite your dislike for sanding, you can't really expect anyone to feel sorry for you. 

Power tools make any task go by more quickly, but the odd angles and precision required by sanding the interior fillets on the Melanesia hull just don't work well with any power sander I can think of.  So if you're doing all the work, you'll want to make sure you have the right tools for the job.

When I stepped onto the porch this morning, I found this unintentional still life on the center thwart.  These are the tools I've been using to smooth my fillets, laid out of the way while I vacuumed the dust out of the hull.  I've been using these tools:
  • coarse (60 grit) sandpaper wrapped around a rough cedar dowel that might end up as a T-handle for one of my paddles, for sanding the curved fillets;
  • a SurForm (surface-forming) plane;
  • a 4-in-hand rasp that I think I found in the street years ago.
  • and a folded scrap of 60 grit sandpaper for the fine work
Of these, the 4-in-hand rasp has been the most useful.  It's great for knocking down high spots, and I've found that it chews up the fluffy fillet epoxy nicely, but doesn't really dig into the pure epoxy coating on the wood, so it's great for smoothing down the raised edges of the fillets where I peeled back the masking tape.

The point of all this is - of filleting in general, and of sanding the fillets smooth in particular - is to provide a very smooth, gently curved transition from one panel to the other.  Well-supported fiberglass tape has excellent tension strength, but if you put a hard corner in it, or leave a gap beneath the tape, you're creating concentration of stresses that will eventually become a point of failure.

The good news is that it's not finish sanding.  The epoxy will fill any scratching left behind by the coarse sandpaper or the even coarser rasp. 

Anyway, in my own build, I'm almost done sanding and hope to put the first glass tape on today.  That's a real milestone, and I'm excited to move beyond the fillets to the next stage of things.

Friday, May 11, 2012

Sail Progress: Bolt Rope Installed

With some weird late-winter weather interrupting our early summer, I've been able to spend some time sewing the bolt rope into the edge of my sail without feeling guilty: surely you don't expect me to work on the hull when it's 43°F and raining?!?

The bolt rope is an actual rope sewn into a hem along the edge of the sail.  It provides a simple way to reinforce the edge so that stresses are well-distributed without a complicated seam.

Tonight, I put the finishing stitches in.  For those of you keeping track at home, that's about 26' of hand-stitching. Sewing is not my strong suit, so it was tough work.  I actually missed the infernal device!  But the sail really looks like a sail now.

There's still more rope to sew on, but that goes outside the hem, and is merely sewn/lashed to the interior bolt rope at 6" intervals.  I suspect it will be quicker work.  Before I can do it, though, I'll need to buy some line at the local hardware store. I don't have enough of the used polypro rope I pulled out of a trash can to complete the job.

I'll try to pick up that line, and maybe some sandpaper, tomorrow. And if this weather holds, I might just pull out the infernal device again to sew on my sail numbers and Wharram insignia, too.

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

More Sailmaking

For some reason, I'm loathe to break out the sandpaper and finish the fillets in my hull.  But time's a-wasting, so I need to make some sort of progress on the boat.

There's still the sail to work on, so this morning my son and I broke out the infernal device the sewing machine.  We retouched some segments of the center seam that were sloppy or crooked, or where the machine skipped stitches.

Then we got out the batten, and sketched in the hollow in the leach (mouth?) of the sail.  I triple-checked to ensure that it really was cut that way, and not just shown curved in the drawings because that's how it looks when you're sailing.  But no, I'm pretty sure that's actually how it should be cut.

So we sketched and cut the hollow, then hemmed it to a length of polypropylene webbing.  It looks much more like a crab claw sail with that curve in place.

The next step will be to hand-stitch the bolt ropes into the seam along the head and foot of the sail, and again outside the seam.  That rope will be used as eyelets when we lace the sail to the spars.

Speaking of spars, I picked up three impressive lengths of straight, dead aspen at a friend's cabin last weekend.  I haven't decided yet if they're to be spars or kiato, or some of each.  But they represent some more non-hull progress.  So even though I'm avoiding the fillets, I'm still moving the project forward.

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Budget Update

I mentioned recently that I was out of glass bubbles (an important filleting additive) and getting low on epoxy.  So I've placed another order with Merton's, to the tune of $67.24.  This brings the epoxy lineitem in my budget up to $243.76, and the total cost thus far to $595.89. 

For those of you keeping score at home, that's around $150, or roughly 33%, over the initial budget estimate, which I arrived at by converting Wharram's budget estimate from British pounds to US dollars. 

But the "good news" is that I'm not only well over budget, I'm also well behind schedule.  Extra time means extra time to save money towards the build.  So while I'm not thrilled to be over budget, I do at least have the money to spend.  If I had reached this point in the build last fall, I would have had to put the build on hold while I saved up for more materials.

Oh, and that Merton's box showed up yesterday, so I should be able to produce some more construction news shortly.  That's all for now.