My son Tom putting his Karate skills to good use punching the old windows out. The rubber was perished and badly fitted and the wondows were cracked and brittle. Not sur eyet what or how to replace the wondows. I was quoted for aluminium framed windows with toughened glass or perspex. The price shocked me, more than £500 for the four!!! A cheaper option will have to be found but I still want it to look good.
Saturday, 23 October 2010
Windows
My son Tom putting his Karate skills to good use punching the old windows out. The rubber was perished and badly fitted and the wondows were cracked and brittle. Not sur eyet what or how to replace the wondows. I was quoted for aluminium framed windows with toughened glass or perspex. The price shocked me, more than £500 for the four!!! A cheaper option will have to be found but I still want it to look good.
Transom and through hull fitting
This is the transom now it has been sanded and painted with grey primer. I have bought a new through hull fitting which is in place at the bottom of the transom. I will either connect this to a drain at the aft end of the cockpit or use it as an outlet for a hand operated bilge pump.
Thursday, 21 October 2010
Rubbing strake
The sample on the left is the likely one I will use as it has a lip to accomodate the step where deck overlaps hull. Plenty of room for some sealant. The profile is screwed in place then the tube put in afterwards. Comes in blue, black or red and different sizes. The second profile from the same company is intersting as you can sand the surface to look like wood from a distance but it is flat profile where is goes agains the hull and I coul dnot get the white part to fit correctly so no use for the Alacrity unless I put an infill piece on the hull before fitting but that would be too fiddly I think. If you see my link to Misty the Silhouette Edward has used the white profile and it looks great.
Mainsheet horse
Rudder pintle
Tuesday, 19 October 2010
The old and new galley sink
You can see the waste outlet after the sink was removed and more blue fleck paint...
This is the new sink surround with the hole for the new sink.
I had a stainless sink that I had on a previous boat, long story, so I used it here. Otherwise I would probably have just used a plastic bowl which could be thrown over board. Not sure what I will cover the wood in to keep moisture out.
There will not be a tap or anything just a plastic jerry can with a tap. Not sure where it will be sighted yet but it looks quite a good spot below but I have yet to see if my kettle will fit under the tap, very important....
Ribs
With a bit of a tug the rib came clean away from the hull. There was no limber hole to allow water to run aft so any water would have sat against this rib. I am not sure whether to add any limber holes but I will decide before final fitting.
I might need to shave a bit off the top of the rib before fixing to make sure the floor sits level.
Galley Stove that was on boat when I bought it
New locker in progress
Portside locker refurb...
The plywood base of the locker was delaminated but I wanted to avoid ripping it all out. I also wanted to extend the locker forward to make more storage. I did this on a Silhouette I had some years ago. I will try to use the little door again though.
Anchor point for end of anchor chain
Plate fitted and bolted in. Just need to shorten the bolts a little.
Anchor locker
This picture shows the delamination of the plywood and it was very soft. Lots of dried mud and sand fell out as I removed the bulkhead...
The new ply bulkhead shaped and sat in place prior to glassing in. I painted the chain locker with grey bitumastic.
The bulkhead fitted and now primed with all other wood and a trim of teak has been fitted across the top. I made an infill piece for the top and will allow it to be removed easily but it will hide the chain.
Monday, 18 October 2010
A place to work...
eBay is a wonderful thing...
The built in water tank
The filler hole had no water tight cap to seal it from the spray on the foredeck and just had a perished rubber cap! Also good to stub your toe on no doubt...
After the side of the tank had been cut open with a jig saw and after I had removed all the black crud at the bottom...
You can just see the bottom of the filler pipe protruding. This turned out to be a pain to remove as it was flanged between the underside of the deck and the top of the tank.
I had to remove the top of the tank anyway then I was able to remove the pipe and the pullpit bolts which were nicely rusty anyway. I will line this locker and make a neat frame in wood to finish it off. Another little job...
The space left after the BH toilet was removed. What will I use this for I am not sure but...
Possibly a space for a cool box? I think I will put a base in just resting on where the toilet was fixed, after sealing the hole of course. Then a shelf above to put a small single burner and then some storage for cooking utensils. This cool box fitted quite snugly though...