Jump to content

Seventynet

NRG Member
  • Posts

    735
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Seventynet

  1. Well this thing has been gathering moss hasn’t it! Hi Ronald. It’s been a while but I think I used masking tape, cut to measure after laying it over the bulkhead edges and then spray painted (can) the interior. I sort of wonder why I would even have done that but I may have completed the fairing process beforehand.

    thanks for looking in.

    Ian

  2. Thanks B.E., honestly your build is absolutely beautiful and there has been more than one occasion where I had wished I was behind you so that I could have followed your lead. I have said to myself many times that I have to build another Cheerful so that I can do a better job next time.

     

    Al thanks for the compliment. I know your work and you will do a splendid job on it. You will also enjoy it as much as I do. Chuck has put together a beauty.

     

    Ian

  3. Thanks for the encouragement Kurt and Don. I really would like to see more of your build Kurt. Don I wonder what you’ve been cooking up in that shipyard of yours? Any undocumented projects you’ve been holding back?:)

     

    I cleared the Cheerful deck for action this morning :pirate41:. It feels good to be back at it.

     

    Best Regards,

    Ian 

  4. Thanks so much for the (overly) kind words and for hitting the like button.

     

    Jim: Thanks for the encouragement. I am intrigued by the picture of your yellow cedar deck. Where can I find your beautiful model?

     

    Antony: Thank you. I have come up with a pretty reliable approach to removing planks by first treating the area with rubbing alcohol and then heating up the area with a heat gun (after the fumes have cleared!). The planks come off with ease. And clean up is easier too.

     

    Much appreciated Joe. I found your Atlantis restoration project the other day. Wow is all I can say!

     

    Thanks so much for following Niles. Love your work!

     

    Regards,

    Ian

  5. Decking

    1.       I used Alaskan yellow cedar for the deck. I’d also used it for the deck on my Brazzera. It is perfect for this application.

    2.      Decking layout. I would do it slightly different next time. I would let some of the bow planks close to the center plank taper so that I could end up with all of the planks except the center plank being the same width at the bow. I could have been more careful to achieve the same objective at the stern as well.

    This is where I am at today. It may be a few weeks before I have any updates. I hope these are of some interest and value to those starting out. 

    Best Regards,

    Ian

    DSC03638.JPG

    DSC03642.JPG

    DSC03643.JPG

  6. Deck Structures

    I bought and assembled all of Chuck’s kits. They are well worth it. Even the windlass which I built but can only conclude was eaten by my shop vac and dumped in the garbage after my semi-annual filter clean. Sigh, I guess I’ll have to order another one from Chuck.

     

    20180413_210858348_iOS.jpg

    20180413_210909418_iOS.jpg

    20180413_210914187_iOS.jpg

  7. wales and stuff

    1.    Take your time with the “fancy” pieces that run from the bottom of the wales to the top of the transom. That’s really all I can say, just take your time. I didn’t and had to improvise. Pretty much concealable in the end.

    2.    My approach for building the counter worked well. Sorry no construction pictures. I laminated several 1/8th inch thick pieces of boxwood edge to edge. Overlaid this prepared structure (there is one for each side) with the pencil-traced outline of the frame using Scotch’s (3M™) matte tape, cut it out, carefully manicured it and glued it into the frame. This worked better IMHO than fitting each plank into the frame.

    20180324_225748605_iOS.jpg

     

    20180328_155857707_iOS.jpg

    20180428_000906525_iOS.jpg

    DSC03622.JPG

    DSC03624.JPG

     

    DSC03627.JPG

    DSC03629.JPG

     

     

     

     

  8. Greetings shipmates,

    I have decided, somewhat retrospectively, to show an abbreviated build log of Chuck’s Cutter Cheerful, which has been paused for the last few months while I work on other things.  I hadn’t intended to document this build because there are already so many excellent logs here. My thinking was that I’m slightly beyond the “help me” stage but not yet at the “here’s how you should do it” stage for creating a build log - putting me in limbo land.

    So perhaps I can go forward with a “here’s how you shouldn’t do it” log. This will allow me to go back and examine the areas I can improve for the next Cheerful build, not to mention the possible benefit to others. But I am sorry I did not take a lot of photos.

     

    Instructions for this build. Chuck's instructions are the best I've encountered. Read them carefully, re-read them and you will be happy.

     

    Stage 1: Gun Ports & Planking

    1.    You simply cannot be too precise with the gun port frames. I was not. I will next time. When you are talking about a 1/64th inset from the planking it is important to get the line right. I used European boxwood for these, simply because I had a piece. Harder than Castello and pinker. Sorry,no pictures.

    2.    One must take the time to fair the bulkheads to perfection. While Chuck abundantly warns of this, and I had thought I’d done a decent job of it, there was one or two bulkheads near the stem on the port side that were slightly “high”. This resulted in me merrily sanding right through several planks. I replaced 4 or 5 of them (but could have done a better job of even that).

    3.    The planking is thin. Of course, it is adequate if you fair the bulkheads perfectly, otherwise…

    4.    The shape of the rabbet at the stem is important. If you want the planks to fit like a lock and key, take the time to shape it perfectly, it will pay off. It doesn’t take much figuring to know how to do that, just patience with a good file.

    5.    Bending Castello boxwood is a truly liberating experience. Easy peasy. The first time I’ve ever used it. Absolutely beautiful wood.

    6.    Learn how to read the plans properly. Forgetting that the plans represent a 3-dimensional model projected as 2-D will run you into trouble. Witness my first two planks below the wales at the stern on both sides. Too narrow. I had planked most of the hull before I woke up. So I left the whole thing as it was and somehow the rest of the planks forgave me and allowed me to end up approximately where I needed to be as I planked down the stern post. I can’t remember if I slipped an extra-wide plank in there to compensate. I think I did.

     

    20180303_175450509_iOS.jpg

    DSC03618.JPG

    DSC03620.JPG

    DSC03621.JPG

×
×
  • Create New...