Showing posts with label plywood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plywood. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 10, 2019

1963 Alcort Sunfish CHIP 10 Apr 19 Scarfs and Keel Strips

10 Apr 19:

Worked on the bottom panels and keel strip for CHIP. For an 8:1 scarf on 1/4 inch plywood mark a 2 inch scarf line (8 x .25 = 2). The end of the panel is then planed to a slope, with a feather edge on the end up to full thickness at the 2 inch line. And since we want this stern panel scarf to fit underneath the bow panel scarf, we cut the scarf on the top face of the panel as we look at it. For the bow panel, we cut the scarf on the underside face.


120 grit belt on a Black and Decker belt sander a Stanley #5 jack plane to cut the scarfs into the 4 bottom panels. We lined them up on the 2 inch marks and cut the slope, looking for the ply glue lines as we shaved wood away. The goal is to get them as evenly spaced as possible, with the big picture being that the panels are being glued together. and no one will see that part while you are hiking out.


Cut 3/4 inch bottom panel centering strips from pine on the Ryobi table saw. They are sized to fit in the center notch on the keel strip centering jig. The weathered piece above the calipers is the old keel strip, used as a guide to find measurements for the centering strips and new keel strips. The strips are in two pieces, one to fit ahead of the daggerboard and one behind, and that means they can also be cut from an 8 foot piece of lumber. In ohter news Push Stick v1.0 is holding up pretty well.


Attached centering strips temporarily with #10 silicone bronze screws, drilled the pilot hole with a Fuller combination pilot hole and countersink bit. Those bits are tapered and work well for the softer silicone bronze screws, the same ones we'll use to permanently attach the keel strip. Bottom panels will be fit, glued and nailed, then centering strips come out and permanent keel strips wit overlapping edge attached. And the Kobalt drill and impact driver have held up well, we especially like the impact driver to put these screws in. Battery life has been great for our projects.


Attached centering strips temporarily, panels will be fit, glued and nailed, then centering strips come out and permanent keel strips wit overlapping edge attached. Keel strip is on the left, you can barely make out the T shape where the strip will nestle between and overlap the panels.


Log of CHIP.

Friday, January 11, 2019

Sunday, November 18, 2018

Alcort Super Sailfish ZSA ZSA 18 Nov 18 Plywood Bottom

18 Nov 18:

Cut the A/B marine plywood panels lengthwise.


Set the circular saw to cut just past the depth of the panels for the cleanest cut.


This is how our CHIP's panels were key scarfed, we will try to duplicate that.


Scarf was about 1 1/2 inches long on each panel. Made several passes with the circular saw at 1/16th inch to cut away the bulk of the scarf, then cleaned it up the jack plane, finger plane and rabbet plane.


The plywood is A/B, meaning there is a nicer side with with fewer patches. This B side had several patches. Marine grade plywood has more veneer layers and is glued together with waterproof glue. The A side can have patches also, just fewer of them, they are faired with putty and sanded.


Used the old keel strip to set the spacing on the bottom panels. Tacked the bottom down with ring shank nails and strapped the bow and stern down to pre set some bend.



The Sunfish keel strip was not as deep because that hull has a deeper V. It also overlapped the panel edges. We will make the new keel strip for ZSA ZSA deeper so she will track better, with the overlap to protect the panel edges and help seal up the keel seams.




ZSA ZSA's Log.

Thursday, November 20, 2014

SBR Tool Cart

St Jacques checking out "Shadow" the Tool Cart. I made the cart 30 inches high so it can sit level with our folding work table. The top tray is also measured to hold a chop saw. The cart is 18x24, and it will store neatly in several areas of the garage. Harbor Freight 5 inch wheels were $6 each, half a sheet of 3/4 inch plywood $13, plus lag bolts, washers and wood screws. If I build another, I will probably use 1x4 lumber, wasn't real happy with the quality of the plywood and how it split along some edges.

From SBR 4: Jun 2014 -

Hand tools and battery powered on the top, wired on the bottom.

From SBR 4: Jun 2014 -

Hand tools and battery powered on the top, wired on the bottom. Plus my "box o bolts"...."sacks of screws?"

From SBR 4: Jun 2014 -